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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Roving East and Roving West, by E. V. Lucas
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
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+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
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+ text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
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+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Roving East and Roving West, by E. V. Lucas
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Roving East and Roving West
+
+Author: E. V. Lucas
+
+
+Release Date: January, 2005 [EBook #7237]
+This file was first posted on March 30, 2003
+Last Updated: May 12, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROVING EAST AND ROVING WEST ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Tonya Allen, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ ROVING EAST <br />AND ROVING WEST
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By E. V. Lucas
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ To <br /> <br /> E. L. L. <br /> <br /> My Host At Raisina
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="middle">
+ <p>
+ {Illustration: TWO MEN ADMIRING FUJI FROM A WINDOW From Hokusai's "A
+ Hundred Views of Fuji"} (Illustrations not available in this file)
+ </p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Sir, there are two objects of curiosity, e.g., the Christian world
+ and the Mahometan world."&mdash;DR. JOHNSON.
+ </p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ <p>
+ "Motion recollected in tranquillity."&mdash;WORDSWORTH (<i>very nearly</i>).
+ </p>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>INDIA</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> NOISELESS FEET </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> THE SAHIB </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE PASSING SHOW </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> INDIA'S BIRDS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> THE TOWERS OF SILENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE GARLANDS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> DELHI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> A DAY'S HAWKING </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> NEW, OR IMPERIAL, DELHI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> THE DIVERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE ROPE TRICK </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> AGRA AND FATEHPUR-SIKRI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> LUCKNOW </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> A TIGER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> THE SACRED CITY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> CALCUTTA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> ROSE AYLMER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> JOB AND JOE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> EXIT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> <b>JAPAN</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> INTRODUCTORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> THE LITTLE LAND </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> THE RICE FIELDS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> SURFACE MATERIALISM </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> FIRST GLIMPSE OF FUJI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> TWO FUNERALS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> THE LITTLE GEISHA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> MANNERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> THE PLAY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> MYANOSHITA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> <b>AMERICA</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> DEMOCRACY AT HOME </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> SAN FRANCISCO </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> ROADS GOOD AND BAD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> UNIVERSITIES, LOVE AND PRONUNCIATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> FIRST SIGNS OF PROHIBITION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> R.L.S. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> STORIES AND HUMOURISTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> THE CARS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> CHICAGO </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> THE MOVIES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0043"> THE AMERICAN FACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> PROHIBITION AGAIN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> THE BALL GAME </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0046"> SKYSCRAPERS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0047"> A PLEA FOR THE AQUARIUM </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0048"> ENGLISH AND FRENCH INFLUENCES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0049"> SKY-SIGNS AND CONEY ISLAND </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0050"> THE PRESS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0051"> TREASURES OF ART </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0052"> MOUNT VERNON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0053"> VERS LIBRE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0054"> REVOLT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0055"> DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0056"> BOSTON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0057"> PHILADELPHIA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0058"> GENERAL REFLECTIONS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0059"> INDEX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INDIA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NOISELESS FEET
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although India is a land of walkers, there is no sound of footfalls. Most
+ of the feet are bare and all are silent: dark strangers overtake one like
+ ghosts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both in the cities and the country some one is always walking. There are
+ carts and motorcars, and on the roads about Delhi a curious service of
+ camel omnibuses, but most of the people walk, and they walk ever. In the
+ bazaars they walk in their thousands; on the long, dusty roads, miles from
+ anywhere, there are always a few, approaching or receding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is odd that the only occasion on which Indians break from their walk
+ into a run or a trot is when they are bearers at a funeral, or have an
+ unusually heavy head-load, or carry a piano. Why there is so much
+ piano-carrying in Calcutta I cannot say, but the streets (as I feel now)
+ have no commoner spectacle than six or eight merry, half-naked fellows,
+ trotting along, laughing and jesting under their burden, all with an odd,
+ swinging movement of the arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of one's earliest impressions of the Indians is that their hands are
+ inadequate. They suggest no power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not only is there always some one walking, but there is always some one
+ resting. They repose at full length wherever the need for sleep takes
+ them; or they sit with pointed knees. Coming from England one is struck by
+ so much inertness; for though the English labourer can be lazy enough he
+ usually rests on his feet, leaning against walls: if he is a land
+ labourer, leaning with his back to the support; if he follows the sea,
+ leaning on his stomach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was interesting to pass on from India and its prostrate philosophers
+ with their infinite capacity for taking naps, to Japan, where there seems
+ to be neither time nor space for idlers. Whereas in India one has
+ continually to turn aside in order not to step upon a sleeping figure&mdash;the
+ footpath being a favourite dormitory&mdash;in Japan no one is ever doing
+ nothing, and no one appears to be weary or poor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ India, save for a few native politicians and agitators, strikes one as a
+ land destitute of ambition. In the cities there are infrequent signs of
+ progress; in the country none. The peasants support life on as little as
+ they can, they rest as much as possible and their carts and implements are
+ prehistoric. They may believe in their gods, but fatalism is their true
+ religion. How little they can be affected by civilisation I learned from a
+ tiny settlement of bush-dwellers not twenty miles from Bombay, close to
+ that beautiful lake which has been transformed into a reservoir, where
+ bows and arrows are still the only weapons and rats are a staple food. And
+ in an hour's time, in a car, one could be telephoning one's friends or
+ watching a cinema!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SAHIB
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I did not have to wait to reach India for that great and exciting moment
+ when one is first called "Sahib." I was addressed as "Sahib," to my
+ mingled pride and confusion, at Marseilles, by an attendant on the steamer
+ which I joined there. Later I grew accustomed to it, although never, I
+ hope, blasé; but to the end my bearer fascinated me by alluding to me as
+ Master&mdash;not directly, but obliquely: impersonally, as though it were
+ some other person that I knew, who was always with me, an <i>alter ego</i>
+ who could not answer for himself: "Would Master like this or that?" "At
+ what time did Master wish to be called?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then the beautiful "Salaam"!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was sorry for the English doomed to become so used to Eastern deference
+ that they cease to be thrilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PASSING SHOW
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult for a stranger to India, especially when paying only a
+ brief visit, to lose the impression that he is at an exhibition&mdash;in a
+ section of a World's Fair. How long it takes for this delusion to wear off
+ I cannot say. All I can say is that seven weeks are not enough. And never
+ does one feel it more than in the bazaar, where movement is incessant and
+ humanity is so packed and costumes are so diverse, and where the
+ suggestion of the exhibition is of course heightened by the merchants and
+ the stalls. What one misses is any vantage point&mdash;anything resembling
+ a chair at the Café de la Paix in Paris, for instance&mdash;where one may
+ sit at ease and watch the wonderful changing spectacle going past. There
+ are in Indian cities no such places. To observe the life of the bazaar
+ closely and be unobserved is almost impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be extraordinarily interesting to sit there, beside some
+ well-informed Anglo-Indian or Indo-Anglian, and learn all the minutić of
+ caste and be told who and what everybody was: what the different ochre
+ marks signified on the Hindu foreheads; what this man did for a living,
+ and that; and so forth. Even without such an informant I was never tired
+ of drifting about the native quarters in whatever city I found myself and
+ watching the curiously leisurely and detached commercial methods of the
+ dealers&mdash;the money lenders reclining on their couches; the pearl
+ merchants with their palms full of the little desirable jewels; the
+ silversmiths hammering; the tailors cross-legged; the whole Arabian Nights
+ pageant. All the shops seem to be overstaffed, unless an element of
+ detached inquisitiveness is essential to business in the East. No
+ transaction is complete without a few watchful spectators, usually youths,
+ who apparently are employed by the establishment for the sole purpose of
+ exhibiting curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I picked up a few odds and ends of information, by degrees, but only the
+ more obvious: such as that the slight shaving of the Mohammedan's upper
+ lip is to remove any impediment to the utterance of the name of Allah;
+ that the red-dyed beards are a record that their wearers have made the
+ pilgrimage to Mecca; that the respirator often worn by the Jains is to
+ prevent the death of even a fly in inhalation. I was shown a Jain woman
+ carefully emptying a piece of wood with holes in it into the road, each
+ hole containing a louse which had crawled there during the night but must
+ not be killed. The Jains adore every living creature; the Hindus chiefly
+ the cow. As for this divinity, she drifts about the cities as though they
+ were built for her, and one sees the passers-by touching her, hoping for
+ sanctity or a blessing. A certain sex inequality is, however, only too
+ noticeable, and particularly in and about Bombay, where the bullock cart
+ is so common&mdash;the bullock receiving little but blows and execration
+ from his drivers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sacred pigeon is also happy in Bombay, being fed copiously all day
+ long; and I visited there a Hindu sanctuary, called the Pingheripole, for
+ every kind of animal&mdash;a Home of Rest or Asylum&mdash;where even
+ pariah dogs are fed and protected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was told early of certain things one must not do: such as saluting with
+ the left hand, which is the dishonourable one of the pair, and refraining
+ carefully, when in a temple or mosque, from touching anything at all,
+ because for an unbeliever to touch is to desecrate. I was told also that a
+ Mohammedan grave always gives one the points of the compass, because the
+ body is buried north and south with the head at the north, turned towards
+ Mecca. The Hindus have no graves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In India the Occidental, especially if coming from France as I did, is
+ struck by the absence of any out-of-door communion between men and women.
+ In the street men are with men, women with women. Most women lower their
+ eyes as a man approaches, although when the woman is a Mohammedan and
+ young one is often conscious of a bright black glance through the veil.
+ There is no public fondling, nothing like the familiar demonstrations of
+ affection that we are accustomed to in Paris and London (more so during
+ the War and since) and in New York. Nothing so offends and surprises the
+ Indian as this want of restraint and shame on our part, and in Japan I
+ learned that the Japanese share the Indian view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to me that the chewing of the betel-nut is more prevalent in
+ Bombay than elsewhere. One sees it all over India; everywhere are moving
+ jaws with red juice trickling; but in Bombay there are more vendors of the
+ rolled-up leaves and more crimson splashes on pavement and wall. It is an
+ unpleasant habit, but there is no doubt that teeth are ultimately the
+ whiter for it. Even though I was instructed in the art of betel-nut
+ chewing by an Indian gentleman of world-wide fame in the cricket field,
+ from whom I would willingly learn anything, I could not endure the
+ experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most nations, I suppose, look upon the dances of other nations with a
+ certain perplexity. Such glimpses, for example, as I had in America of the
+ movement known as the Shimmie Shake filled me with alarm, while Orientals
+ have been known to display boredom at the Russian Ballet. Personally I
+ adore the Russian Ballet, but I found the Nautch very fatiguing. It is at
+ once too long and too monotonous, but I dare say that if one could follow
+ the words of the accompanying songs, or cantillations, the result might be
+ more entertaining. That would not, however, improve the actual dancing, in
+ which I was disappointed. In Japan, on the other hand, I succumbed
+ completely to the odd, hypnotic mechanism of the Geisha, the
+ accompaniments to which are more varied, or more acceptable to my ear,
+ than the Indian music. But I shall always remember the sounds of the
+ distant, approaching or receding, snake-charmers' piping, heard through
+ the heat, as it so often is on Sundays in Calcutta. To my inward ear that
+ is India's typical melody; and it has relationship to the Punch and Judy
+ allurement of our childhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in Bombay that I saw my first fakir, and in Harrison Road,
+ Calcutta, my last. There had been so long a series in between that I was
+ able to confirm my first impression. I can now, therefore, generalise
+ safely when saying that all these strange creatures resemble a blend of
+ Tolstoi and Mr. Bernard Shaw. Imagine such a hybrid, naked save for a loin
+ cloth, and smeared all over with dust, and you have a holy man in the
+ East. The Harrison Road fakir, who passed on his way along the crowded
+ pavement unconcerned and practically unobserved, was white with ashes and
+ was beating a piece of iron as a wayward child might be doing. He was
+ followed by a boy, but no effort was made to collect alms. It is true
+ philosophy to be prepared to live in such a state of simplicity. Most of
+ the problems of life would dissolve and vanish if one could reduce one's
+ needs to the frugality of a fakir. I have thought often of him since I
+ returned, in London, to all the arrears of work and duty and the
+ liabilities that accumulate during a long holiday; but never more so than
+ when confronted by a Peace-time tailor's bill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INDIA'S BIRDS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One of the first peculiarities of Bombay that I noticed and never lost
+ sight of was the kites. The city by day is never without these spies,
+ these sentries. From dawn to dusk the great unresting birds are sailing
+ over it, silent and vigilant. Whenever you look up, there they are,
+ criss-crossing in the sky, swooping and swerving and watching. After a
+ while one begins to be nervous: it is disquieting to be so continually
+ under inspection. Now and then they quarrel and even fight: now and then
+ one will descend with a rush and rise carrying a rat or other delicacy in
+ its claws; but these interruptions of the pattern are only momentary. For
+ the rest of the time they swirl and circle and never cease to watch.
+ Bombay also has its predatory crows, who are so bold that it is unsafe to
+ leave any bright article on the veranda table. Spectacles, for example,
+ set up a longing in their hearts which they make no effort to control. But
+ these birds are everywhere. At a wayside station just outside Calcutta, in
+ the early morning, the passengers all had tea, and when it was finished
+ and the trays were laid on the platform, I watched the crows, who were
+ perfectly aware of this custom and had been approaching nearer and nearer
+ as we drank, dart swiftly to the sugar basins and carry off the lumps that
+ remained. The crow, however, is, comparatively speaking, a human being;
+ the kite is something alien and a cause of fear, and the traveller in
+ India never loses him. His eye is as coldly attentive to Calcutta as to
+ Bombay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is, of course, the indigenous birds of a country that emphasise its
+ foreignness far more than its people. People can travel. Turbaned heads
+ are, for example, not unknown in England; but to have green parrots with
+ long tails flitting among the trees, as they used to flit in my host's
+ garden in Bombay, is to be in India beyond question. At Raisina we had
+ mynahs and the babblers, or "Seven Sisters," in great profusion, and also
+ the King Crow with his imposing tail; while the little striped squirrels
+ were everywhere. These merry restless little rodents do more than run and
+ scamper and leap: they seem to be positively lifted into space by their
+ tails. Their stripes (as every one knows) came directly from the hand of
+ God, recording for ever how, on the day of creation, He stroked them by
+ way of approval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No Indian bird gave me so much pleasure to watch as the speckled
+ kingfishers, which I saw at their best on the Jumna at Okhla. They poise
+ in the air above the water with their long bills pointed downwards at a
+ right-angle to their fluttering bodies, searching the depths for their
+ prey; and then they drop with the quickness of thought into the stream.
+ The other kingfisher&mdash;coloured like ours but bigger&mdash;who waits
+ on an overhanging branch, I saw too, but the evolutions of the hovering
+ variety were more absorbing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When one is travelling by road, the birds that most attract the notice are
+ the peacocks and the giant cranes; while wherever there are cattle in any
+ numbers there are the white paddy birds, feeding on their backs&mdash;the
+ birds from which the osprey plumes are obtained. One sees, too, many kinds
+ of eagle and hawk. In fact, the ornithologist can never be dull in this
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wild animals I had few opportunities to observe, although a mongoose at
+ Raisina gave me a very amusing ten minutes. At Raisina, also, the jackals
+ came close to the house at night; and on an early morning ride in a
+ motorcar to Agra we passed a wolf, and a little later were most impudently
+ raced and outdistanced by a blackbuck, who, instead of bolting into
+ security at the sight or sound of man, ran, or rather, advanced&mdash;for
+ his progress is mysterious and magical&mdash;beside us for some forty
+ yards and then,&mdash;with a laugh, put on extra speed (we were doing
+ perhaps thirty miles an hour) and disappeared ahead. All about Muttra we
+ dispersed monkeys up the trees and into the bushes as we approached. Next
+ to the parrots it is the monkeys that most convince the traveller that he
+ is in a strange tropical land. And the flying foxes. Nothing is more
+ strange than a tree full of these creatures sleeping pendant by day, or
+ their silent swift black movements by night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw no snakes wild, but in the Bacteriological Laboratory at Parel in
+ Bombay, which Lt.-Col. Glen Liston controls with so much zeal and
+ resourcefulness, I was shown the process by which the antidotes to snake
+ poisoning are prepared, for dispersion through the country. A cobra or
+ black snake is released from his cage and fixed by the attendant with a
+ stick pressed on his neck a little below the head. The snake is then
+ firmly and safely held just above this point between the finger and thumb,
+ and a tumbler, with a piece of flannel round its edge, is proffered to it
+ to bite. As the snake bites, a clear yellow fluid, like strained honey in
+ colour and thickness, flows into the glass from the poison fangs. This
+ poison is later injected in small doses into the veins of horses kept
+ carefully for the purpose, and then, in due course, the blood of the
+ horses is tapped in order to make the anti-toxin. Wonderful are the ways
+ of science! The Laboratory is also the headquarters of the Government's
+ constant campaign against malaria and guinea worm, typhoid and cholera,
+ and, in a smaller degree, hydrophobia. But nothing, I should guess, would
+ ever get sanitary sense into India, except in almost negligible patches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE TOWERS OF SILENCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Parsees have made Bombay their own, more surely even than the Scotch
+ possess Calcutta. Numerically very weak, they are long-headed and
+ far-sighted beyond any Indian and are better qualified to traffick and to
+ control. All the cotton mills are theirs, and theirs the finest houses in
+ the most beautiful sites. When that conflict begins between the Hindus and
+ the Mohammedans which will render India a waste and a shambles, it is the
+ Parsees who will occupy the high places&mdash;until a more powerful
+ conqueror arrives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bombay has no more curious sight than the Towers of Silence, the Parsee
+ cemetery; and one of the first questions that one is asked is if one has
+ visited them. But when the time came for me to ascend those sinister steps
+ on Malabar Hill I need hardly say that my companion was a many years'
+ resident of Bombay who, although he had long intended to go there, had
+ hitherto neglected his opportunities. Throughout my travels I was, it is
+ pleasant to think, in this way the cause of more sightseeing in others
+ than they might ever have suffered. To give but one other instance typical
+ of many&mdash;I saw Faneuil Hall in Boston in the company of a Bostonian
+ some thirty years of age, whose office was within a few yards of this
+ historic and very interesting building, and whose business is more
+ intimately associated with culture than any other, but who had never
+ before crossed the threshold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Towers of Silence, which are situated in a very beautiful park, with
+ little temples among the trees and flowers, consist of five circular
+ buildings, a model of one of which is displayed to visitors. Inside the
+ tower is an iron grating on which the naked corpses are laid, and no
+ sooner are they there than the awaiting vultures descend and consume the
+ flesh. I saw these grisly birds sitting expectantly in rows on the coping
+ of the towers, and the sight was almost too gruesome. Such is their
+ voracity that the body is a skeleton in an hour or so. The Parsees choose
+ this method of dissolution because since they worship fire they must not
+ ask it to demean itself with the dead; and both earth and water they hold
+ also too sacred to use for burial. Hence this strange and&mdash;at the
+ first blush&mdash;repellant compromise. The sight of the cemetery that
+ awaits us in England is rarely cheering, but if to that cemetery were
+ attached a regiment of cruel and hideous birds of prey we should shudder
+ indeed. Whether the Parsees shudder I cannot say, but they give no sign of
+ it. They build their palaces in full view of these terrible Towers, pass,
+ on their way to dinner parties, luxuriously in Rolls-Royces beside the
+ trees where the vultures roost, and generally behave themselves as if this
+ were the best possible of worlds and the only one. And I think they are
+ wise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oriental apathy, or, at any rate, unruffled receptiveness, may carry its
+ owner very far, and yet if these vultures cause no misgivings, no chills
+ at the heart, I shall be surprised. As for those olive-skinned Parsee
+ girls, with the long oval faces and the lustrous eyes&mdash;how must it
+ strike them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not till I went to the caves of Elephanta that I saw vultures in
+ their marvellous flight. It is here that they breed, and the sky was full
+ of them at an incredible distance up, resting on their great wings against
+ the wind, circling and deploying. At this height they are magnificent. But
+ seen at close quarters they are horrible, revolting. On a day's hunting
+ which I shall describe later I was in at the death of a gond, or
+ swamp-deer, at about noon, and we returned for the carcase about three
+ hours later, only to find it surrounded by some hundreds of these birds
+ tearing at it in a kind of frenzy of gluttony. They were not in the least
+ disconcerted by our approach, and not until the bearers had taken sticks
+ to them would they leave. The heavy half-gorged flapping of a vulture's
+ wings as it settles itself to a new aspect of its repast is the most
+ disgusting sight I have seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To revert to the Towers of Silence, one is brought very near to death
+ everywhere in the East. We have our funeral corteges at home, with
+ sufficient frequency, but they do not emphasize the thought of the
+ necessary end of all things as do the swathed corpses that one meets so
+ often being carried through the streets, on their way to this or that
+ burning place. In Bombay I met several every day, with their bearers and
+ followers all in white, and all moving with the curious trot that seems to
+ be reserved for such obsequies. There were always, also, during my stay,
+ new supplies of fire-wood outside the great Hindu burning ground in
+ Queen's Road; and yet no epidemic was raging; the city was normal save for
+ a strike of mill-hands. It is true that I met wedding parties almost
+ equally often; but in India a wedding party is not, as with us, a
+ suggestion of new life to replace the dead, for the brides so often are
+ infants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the differences between the poor of London and the poor of India
+ may be noticed here. In the East-End a funeral is considered to be a
+ failure unless its cost is out of all proportion to the survivors' means,
+ while a wedding is a matter of a few shillings; whereas in India a funeral
+ is a simple ceremony, to be hurried over, while the wedding festivities
+ last for weeks and often plunge the family into debts from which they
+ never recover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE GARLANDS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The selective processes of the memory are very curious. It has been
+ decreed that one of my most vivid recollections of Bombay should be that
+ of the embarrassment and half-amused self-consciousness of an American
+ business man on the platform of the railway station for Delhi. Having
+ completed his negotiatory visit he was being speeded on his way by the
+ native staff of the firm, who had hung him with garlands like a
+ sacrificial bull. In the Crawford Market I had watched the florists at
+ work tearing the blossoms from a kind of frangipani known as the Temple
+ Flower, in order to string them tightly into chains; and now and again in
+ the streets one came upon people wearing them; but to find a shrewd and
+ portly commercial American thus bedecked was a shock. As it happened, he
+ was to share my compartment, and on entering, just before the train
+ started, he apologised very heartily for importing so much heavy perfume
+ into the atmosphere, but begged to be excused because it was the custom of
+ the country and he didn't like to hurt anyone's feelings. He then stood at
+ the door, waving farewells, and directly the line took a bend flung the
+ wreaths out of the window. I was glad of his company, for in addition to
+ these floral offerings his Bombay associates had provided him with a
+ barrel of the best oranges that ever were grown&mdash;sufficient for a
+ battalion&mdash;and these we consumed at brief intervals all the way to
+ Delhi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DELHI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "If you can be in India only so short a time as seven weeks," said an
+ artist friend of mine&mdash;and among his pictures is a sombre
+ representation of the big sacred bull that grazes under the walls of Delhi
+ Fort&mdash;"why not stay in Delhi all the while? You will then learn far
+ more of India than by rushing about." I think he was right, although it
+ was not feasible to accept the advice. For Delhi has so much; it has,
+ first and foremost, the Fort; it has the Jama Masjid, that immense mosque
+ where on Fridays at one o'clock may be seen Mohammedans of every age
+ wearing every hue, thousands worshipping as one; it has the ancient
+ capitals scattered about the country around it; it has signs and memories
+ of the Mutiny; it has delectable English residences; and it has the Chadni
+ Chauk, the long main street with all its curious buildings and crowds and
+ countless tributary alleys, every one of which is the East crystallised,
+ every one of which has its white walls, its decorative doorways, its
+ loiterers, its beggars, its artificers, and its defiance of the bogey,
+ Progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another thing: in January, Delhi, before the sun is high and after he has
+ sunk, is cool and bracing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, most of all, Delhi is interesting because it was the very centre of
+ the Mogul dominance, and when one has become immersed in the story of the
+ great rulers, from Babar to Aurungzebe, one thinks of most other history
+ as insipid. Of Babar, who reigned from 1526 to 1530, I saw no trace in
+ India; but his son Humayun (1530-1556) built Indrapat, which is just
+ outside the walls of Delhi, and he lies close by in the beautiful
+ mausoleum that bears his name. Humayun's son, Akbar (1556-1605), preferred
+ Agra to Delhi; nor was Jahangir (1605-1627), who succeeded Akbar, a great
+ builder hereabout; but with Shah Jahan (1627-1658), Jahangir's son, came
+ the present Delhi's golden age. He it was who built the Jama Masjid, the
+ great mosque set commandingly on a mound and gained by magnificent flights
+ of steps. To the traveller approaching the city from any direction the two
+ graceful minarets of the mosque stand for Delhi. It was Shah Jahan, price
+ of Mogul builders, who decreed also the palace in the Fort, to say nothing
+ (at the moment) of the Taj Mahal at Agra; while two of his daughters,
+ Jahanara, and Roshanara, that naughty Begam, enriched Delhi too, the
+ little pavilion in the Gardens that bear Roshanara's name being a gem.
+ Wandering among these architectural delights, now empty and under alien
+ protection, it is difficult to believe that their period was as recent as
+ Cromwell and Milton. But in India the sense of chronology vanishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Shah Jahan came his crafty son, Aurungzebe, who succeeded in keeping
+ his empire together until 1707, and with him the grandeur of the Grand
+ Moguls waned and after him ceased to be, although not until the Mutiny was
+ their rule extinguished. As I have just said, in India the sense of
+ chronology vanishes, or goes astray, and it is with a start that one is
+ confronted, in the Museum in Delhi Fort, by a photograph of the last
+ Mogul!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Bombay, during my wakeful moments in the hottest part of the day, I had
+ passed the time and imbibed instruction by reading the three delightful
+ books of the late E. H. Aitken, who called himself "Eha"&mdash;"Behind the
+ Bungalow," "The Tribes on My Frontier" and "A Naturalist on the Prowl." No
+ more amusing and kindly studies of the fauna, flora and human inhabitants
+ of a country can have ever been written than these; and I can suggest, to
+ the domestically curious mind, no better preparation for a visit to India.
+ But at Raisina, when the cool evenings set in and it was pleasant to get
+ near the wood fire, I took to history and revelled in the story of the
+ Moguls as told by many authorities, but most entertainingly perhaps by
+ Tavernier, the French adventurer who took service under Aurungzebe. If any
+ one wants to know what Delhi was like in the seventeenth century during
+ Aurungzebe's long reign, and how the daily life in the Palace went, and
+ would learn more of the power and autocracy and splendour and cruelty of
+ the Grand Moguls, let him get Tavernier's record. If once I began to quote
+ from it I should never stop; and therefore I pass on, merely remarking
+ that when you have finished the travels of M. Tavernier, the travels of M.
+ Bernier, another contemporary French observer, await you. And I hold you
+ to be envied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Palace in the Fort is now but a fraction of what it was in the time of
+ Aurungzebe and his father, but enough remains to enable the imaginative
+ mind to reconstruct the past, especially if one has read my two annalists.
+ One of Bernier's most vivid passages describes the Diwan-i-Am, or Hall of
+ Public Audience, the building to which, after leaving the modern military
+ part of the Fort, one first comes, where the Moguls sat in state during a
+ durbar, and painted and gilded elephants, richly draped, took part in the
+ obeisances. Next comes the Hall of Private Audiences, where the Peacock
+ Throne once stood. It has now vanished, but in its day it was one of the
+ wonders of the world, the tails of the two guardian peacocks being
+ composed of precious stones and the throne itself being of jewelled gold.
+ It was for this that one of Shah Jahan's poets wrote an inscription in
+ which we find such lines as&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ By the order of the Emperor the azure of Heaven
+ was exhausted on its decoration....
+
+ The world had become so short of gold on account of
+ its use in the throne that the purse of the Earth
+ was empty of treasure....
+
+ On a dark night, by the lustre of its rubies and pearls
+ it can lend stars to a hundred skies....
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ That was right enough, no doubt, but when our poet went on to say,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ As long as a trace remains of existence and space
+ Shah Jahan shall continue to sit on this throne,
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ we feel that he was unwise. Such pronouncements can be tested. As it
+ happened, Shah Jahan was destined, very shortly after the poem was
+ written, to be removed into captivity by his son, and the rest of his
+ unhappy life was spent in a prison at Agra. On each end wall of the Hall
+ of Private Audience is the famous couplet,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ If there is a Paradise on the face of the earth,
+ It is this, Oh! it is this, Oh! it is this.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I think of the garden and palace of Delhi Fort as the loveliest spot in
+ India. Not the most beautiful, not the most impressive; but the loveliest.
+ The Taj Mahal has a greater beauty; the ruined city of Fatehpur-Sikri has
+ a greater dignity; but for the perfection of domestic regality in design
+ and material and workmanship, this marble home and mosque and accompanying
+ garden and terrace could not be excelled. After the Halls of Audience we
+ come to the seraglio and accompanying buildings, where everything is
+ perfect and nothing is on the grand scale. The Pearl Mosque could hardly
+ be smaller; and it is as pure and fresh as a lotus. There is a series of
+ apartments all in white marble (with inlayings of gold and the most
+ delicately pierced marble gratings) through which a stream of water used
+ to run (and it ran again at the Coronation Durbar in 1911, when the Royal
+ Baths were again made to "function") that must be one of the most magical
+ of the works of man. Every inch is charming and distinguished. All these
+ rooms are built along the high wall which in the time of Shah Jahan and
+ his many lady loves was washed by the Jumna. But to-day the river has
+ receded and a broad strip of grass intervenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A DAY'S HAWKING
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One of my best Indian days was that on which Colonel Sir Umar Hayat Khan
+ took us out a-hawking. Sir Umar is himself something of a hawk&mdash;an
+ impressive figure in his great turban with long streamers, his keen
+ aquiline features and blackest of hair. All sport comes naturally to him,
+ whether hunting or shooting, pig-sticking, coursing or falconry; and the
+ Great War found him with a sportsman's eagerness to rush into the fray,
+ where he distinguished himself notably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We found this gallant chieftain in the midst of his retainers on the
+ further bank of the Jumna, at the end of the long bridge. Here the plains
+ begin&mdash;miles of fields of stubble, with here and there a tree and
+ here and there a pool or marsh, as far as eye can reach, an ancient walled
+ city in the near distance being almost the only excrescence. Between the
+ river and this city was our hunting ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the exception of Sir Umar, two of his friends and ourselves, the
+ company was on foot; and nothing more like the middle ages did I ever see.
+ The retainers were in every kind of costume, one having an old pink coat
+ and one a green; one leading a couple of greyhounds in case we put up a
+ hare; others carrying guns (for we were prepared for all); while the chief
+ falconer and his assistants had their hawks on their wrists, and one odd
+ old fellow was provided with a net, in which a captive live hawk was to
+ flutter and struggle to attract his hereditary foes, the little birds,
+ who, deeming him unable to hit back, were to swarm down to deride and defy
+ and be caught in the meshes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I may say at once that hawking, particularly in this form, does not give
+ me much pleasure. There is something magnificent in the flight of the
+ falcon when it is released and flung towards its prey, but the odds are
+ too heavy in its favour and the whimperings of the doomed quarry strike a
+ chill in the heart. We flew our hawks at duck and plovers, and missed
+ none. Often the first swoop failed, but the deadly implacable pursuer was
+ instantly ready to swoop again, and rarely was a third manoeuvre
+ necessary. Man, under the influence of the excitement of the chase, is the
+ same all the world over, and there was no difference between these Indians
+ moving swiftly to intervene between the hawk and its stricken prey and an
+ English boy running to retrieve his rabbit. Their animation and triumph&mdash;even
+ their shouts and cries&mdash;were alike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so we crossed field after field on our gentle steeds&mdash;and no one
+ admires gentleness in a horse more than I&mdash;stopping only to watch
+ another tragedy of the air, or to look across the river to Delhi and see
+ the Fort under new conditions. All this country I had so often looked down
+ upon from those high massive walls, standing in one of the lovely windows
+ of Shah Jahan's earthly paradise; and now the scene was reversed, and I
+ began to take more delight in it than in the sport. But at a pond to which
+ we next came there was enacted a drama so absorbing that everything else
+ was forgotten, even the heat of the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this pond were three wild-duck at which a falcon was instantly flown.
+ For a while, however, they kept their presence of mind and refused to
+ leave the water&mdash;diving beneath the surface at the moment that the
+ enemy was within a foot of them. On went the hawk, in its terrible, cruel
+ onset, and up came the ducks, all ready to repeat these tactics when it
+ turned and attacked again. But on one of the party (I swear it was not I),
+ in order to assist the hawk, firing his gun, two of the ducks became
+ panic-stricken and left the water, only of course to be quickly destroyed.
+ It was on the hawk's return journey to the pond to make sure of the third
+ duck that I saw for the first time in my life&mdash;and I hope the last&mdash;the
+ expression on the countenance of these terrible birds in the execution of
+ their duty: more than the mere execution of duty, the determination to
+ have no more nonsense, to put an end to anything so monstrous as
+ self-protection in others; for my horse being directly in the way, he flew
+ under its neck and for a moment I thought that he was confusing me with
+ the desired mallard. Nothing more merciless or purposeful did I ever see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then began a really heroic struggle on the part of the victim. He timed
+ his dives to perfection, and escaped so often that the spirit of chivalry
+ would have decreed a truce. But blood had been tasted, and, the desire
+ being for more, the guns were again discharged. Not even they, however,
+ could divert the duck from his intention of saving his life, and he dived
+ away from the shot, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this moment that assistance to the gallant little bird arrived&mdash;not
+ from man, who was past all decency, but from brother feathers. Out of a
+ clear sky suddenly appeared two tern, dazzling in their whiteness, and
+ these did all in their power to infuriate the hawk and lure him from the
+ water. They flew round him and over him; they called him names; they said
+ he was a bully and that all of us (which was true) ought to be ashamed of
+ ourselves; they daunted and challenged and attacked. But the enemy was too
+ strong for them. A fusillade drove them off, and once again we were free
+ to consider the case of the duck, who was still swimming anxiously about,
+ hoping against hope. More shots were fired, one of the boys waded in with
+ a stick, and the dogs were added to the assault; and in the face of so
+ determined a bombardment the poor little creature at last flew up, to be
+ struck down within a few seconds by the insatiable avenger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was the crowning event of the afternoon. Thereafter we had only small
+ successes, and some very pronounced failures when, as happened several
+ times, a bird flew for safety through a tree, and the hawk, following, was
+ held up amid the branches. One of the birds thus to escape was a blue jay
+ of brilliant beauty. We also got some hares. And then we loitered back
+ under the yellowing sky, and Sir Umar Hayat Khan ceased suddenly to be a
+ foe of fur and feathers and became a poet, talking of sunsets in India and
+ in England as though the appreciation of tender beauty were his only
+ delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NEW, OR IMPERIAL, DELHI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There have been seven Delhis; and it required no little courage to
+ establish a new one&mdash;the Imperial capital&mdash;actually within sight
+ of most of them; but the courage was forthcoming. Originally the position
+ was to be to the north of the present city, where the Coronation Durbar
+ spread its canvas, but Raisina was found to be healthier, and it is there,
+ some five miles to the south-west, that the new palaces are rising from
+ the rock. Fatehpur-Sikri is the only city with which the New Delhi can be
+ compared; but not Akbar himself could devise it on a nobler scale. Akbar's
+ centralising gift and Napoleon's spacious views may be said to combine
+ here, the long avenues having kinship with the Champs Elysées, and
+ Government House and the Secretariat on the great rocky plateau at Raisina
+ corresponding to the palace on Fatehpur-Sikri's highest point. The
+ splendour and the imagination which designed the lay-out of Imperial Delhi
+ cannot be over-praised, and under the hands of Sir Edwin Lutyens and Mr.
+ Herbert Baker some wonderful buildings are coming to life. The city, since
+ it is several square miles in extent, cannot be finished for some years,
+ but it may be ready to be the seat of Government as soon as 1924.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As I have said, the old Delhis are all about the new one. On the Grand
+ Trunk road out of Delhi proper, which goes to Muttra and Agra, you pass,
+ very quickly, on the left, the remains of Firozabad, the capital of Firoz
+ Shah in the later thirteenth century. Two or three miles further on is
+ Indrapat on its hill overlooking the Jumna, surrounded by lofty walls. It
+ is as modern as the sixteenth century, but is now in ruins. At Indrapat
+ reigned Humayun, the son of the mighty Babar (who on his conquering way to
+ Delhi had swum every river in advance of his army) and the father of the
+ mighty Akbar. I loitered long within Indrapat's massive walls, which are
+ now given up to a few attendants and an occasional visitor, and like all
+ the monuments around Delhi are most carefully conserved under the Act for
+ that purpose, which was not the least of Lord Curzon's Viceregal
+ achievements. Among the buildings which still stand, rising from the turf,
+ is Humayun's library. It was here that he met his end&mdash;one tradition
+ relating that he fell in the dark on his way to fetch a book, and another
+ that his purpose had been less intellectually amatory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another mile and we come, still just beside the Grand Trunk road, to
+ Humayun's Tomb, which stands in a vast garden where green parrots
+ continually chatter and pursue each other. There is something very
+ charming&mdash;a touch of the truest civilisation, if civilisation means
+ the art of living graciously&mdash;in the practice of the old Emperors and
+ rulers, of building their mausoleums during their lifetime and using them,
+ until their ultimate destiny was fulfilled, as pleasure resorts. To this
+ enchanting spot came Humayun and his ladies full of life, to be insouciant
+ and gay. Then, his hour striking, Humayun's happy retreat became Humayun's
+ Tomb. He died in 1556, when Queen Mary, in England, was persecuting
+ Protestants. The Tomb is in good repair and to the stranger to the East
+ who has not yet visited Agra and seen the Taj Mahal (which has a similar
+ ground plan), it is as beautiful as need be. Humayun's cenotaph, in plain
+ white marble, is in the very centre. Below, in the vault immediately
+ beneath it, are his remains. Other illustrious dust is here, too; and some
+ less illustrious, such as that of Humayun's barber, which reposes beneath
+ a dome of burning-blue tiles in a corner of the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the upper galleries of the Emperor's mausoleum the eye enjoys various
+ rich prospects&mdash;the valley of the Jumna pulsating in the heat, the
+ walls of the New Delhi at Raisina almost visibly growing, and, to the
+ north, Delhi itself, with the twin towers of the great mosque over all.
+ Down the Grand Trunk road, immediately below, are bullock wagons and
+ wayfarers, and here and there is a loaded camel. Across the road is a
+ curious little group of sacred buildings whither some of the wayfarers no
+ doubt are bent on a pilgrimage; for here is the shrine of the Saint
+ Nizam-ud-din Aulia, who worked miracles during his life and died during
+ the reign of our Edward II&mdash;in 1324.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On visiting his shrine (which involved the usual assumption of overshoes
+ to prevent our infidel leather from contaminating the floor), we fell,
+ after evading countless beggars and would-be guides, into the hands of a
+ kindly old man who pressed handfuls of little white nuts upon us and who
+ remains in my memory as the only independent Mussulman priest in India,
+ for he refused a tip. In this respect nothing could be more widely
+ separated than his conduct and that of the three priests of the Jama
+ Masjid in Delhi, who, discovering us on the wall, just before the Friday
+ service began, held up the service for several minutes while they
+ explained their schedule of gratuities&mdash;beginning with ten rupees for
+ the High Priest&mdash;and this after we had already provided for the
+ attendant who had supplied the overshoes and had led us to the point of
+ vantage! I thought how amusing it would be if a visitor to an English
+ cathedral&mdash;where money usually has to pass, as it is&mdash;were
+ surrounded by the Dean, Archdeacon, Canons and Minor Canons, with
+ outstretched hands, and had to buy his way to a sight of the altar,
+ according to the status of each. The spectacle would be as odd to us, as
+ it must be to the French or Italians&mdash;and even perhaps Americans&mdash;to
+ see a demand for an entrance fee on the Canterbury portals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Were we to continue on the Grand Trunk road for a few miles, first
+ crossing a noble Mogul bridge, we should come to a little walled city,
+ Badapur, where a turning due west leads to another Delhi of the past,
+ Tughlakabad, and on to yet another, the remains of Lal Kot, where the
+ famous Minar soars to the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most pleasing effects of the New Delhi is the series of vistas
+ which the lay-out provides. It has been so arranged that many of the
+ avenues radiating from the central rock on which Government House and the
+ Secretariat are being set are closed at their distant ends by historic
+ buildings. Standing on the temporary tower which marks this centre one is
+ able to see in a few moments all the ruined cities that I have mentioned.
+ The Kutb Minar is the most important landmark in the far south, although
+ the eye rests most lovingly on the red and white comeliness of the tomb of
+ Safdar Jang in the middle distance&mdash;which, with Humayun's Tomb, makes
+ a triangle with the new Government House. Within that triangle are the
+ Lodi tombs, marking yet another period in the history of Delhi, the Lodis
+ being the rulers who early in the fifteenth century were defeated by
+ Babar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kutb Minar enclosure, which is a large garden, where beautiful
+ masonry, flowers, trees and birds equally flourish, commemorates the
+ capture of Delhi by Muhammad bin Sam in 1193, the battle being directed by
+ his lieutenant, Kutb-ud-din. From that time until the Mutiny in 1857 Delhi
+ was under Mohammedan rule. One of the first acts of the conqueror was to
+ destroy the Hindu temple that stood here and erect the mosque that now
+ takes its place, and he then built the great tower known as the Kutb
+ Minar, or Tower of Victory, which ascends in diminishing red and white
+ storeys to a height of 235 feet, involving the inquisitive view-finder in
+ a climb of 379 steps. On the other side of the mosque are the beginnings
+ of a second tower, which, judging by the size of the base, was to have
+ risen to a still greater height, but it was abandoned after 150 feet. Its
+ purpose was to celebrate for ever the glory of the Emperor Ala-ud-din
+ (1296-1316).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of the mosque is the Iron Pillar which has been the cause of so
+ much perplexity both to antiquaries and chemists, and meat and drink to
+ Sanscrit scholars. The pillar has an inscription commemorating an early
+ monarch named Chandra who conquered Bengal in the fifth century, and it
+ must have been brought to this spot for re-erection. But its refusal to
+ rust, and the purity of its constituents, are its special merits. To me
+ the mysteries of iron pillars are without interest, and what I chiefly
+ remember of this remarkable pleasaunce is the exquisite stone carvings of
+ the ruined cloisters and the green parrots that play among the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE DIVERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As we were leaving the Kutb after a late afternoon visit, my host and I
+ were hailed excitedly by an elderly man whose speech was incomprehensible,
+ but whose gestures indicated plainly enough that there was something
+ important up the hill. The line of least resistance being the natural one
+ in India, we allowed him to guide us, and came after a few minutes, among
+ the ruins of the citadel of Lal Kot, to one of those deep wells gained by
+ long flights of steps whither the ladies of the palaces used to resort in
+ the hottest weather. Evening was drawing on and the profundities of this
+ cavern were forbiddingly gloomy; nor was the scene rendered more alluring
+ by the presence of three white-bearded old men, almost stark naked and
+ leaner than greyhounds, who shivered and grimaced, and suggested nothing
+ so much as fugitives from the grave. They were, however, not only alive,
+ but athletically so, being professional divers who earned an exceedingly
+ uncomfortable living by dropping, feet first, from the highest point of
+ the building into the water eighty feet below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of them indicating his willingness&mdash;more than willingness,
+ eagerness&mdash;to perform this manoeuvre for two rupees, we agreed, and
+ placing us on a step from which the best view could be had, he fled along
+ the gallery to the top of the shaft, and after certain preliminary
+ movements, to indicate how perilous was the adventure, and how chilly the
+ evening, and how more than worth two rupees it was, he committed his body
+ to the operations of the law of gravity. We saw it through the apertures
+ in the shaft on its downward way and then heard the splash as it reached
+ the distant water, while a crowd of pigeons who had retired to roost among
+ the masonry dashed out and away. The diver emerged from the well and came
+ running up the steps towards us, while his companion scarecrows fled also
+ to the top of the shaft and one after the other dropped down, too; so that
+ in a minute or so we were surrounded by three old, dripping men, each
+ demanding two rupees. Useless to protest that we had desired but one of
+ them to perform: they pursued us into the open, and even clung to our
+ knees, and of course we paid&mdash;afterwards to learn that one rupee for
+ the lot was a lavish guerdon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One meets with these divers continually, wherever there is a pool sacred
+ or otherwise; but some actually leap into the water and do not merely
+ drop. At the shrine of the Saint Nizam-ud-din, near Humayun's Tomb, I
+ found them&mdash;but there they were healthy-looking youths&mdash;and
+ again at Fatehpur-Sikri. But for this sporadic diving, the wrestling bouts
+ which are common everywhere, the Nautch and the jugglers, India seems to
+ have no pastimes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE ROPE TRICK
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The returning traveller from India is besieged by questioners who want to
+ know all about the most famous of the jugglers' performances. In this
+ trick the magician flings a rope into the air, retaining one end in his
+ hand, and his boy climbs up it and disappears. I did not see it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AGRA AND FATEHPUR-SIKRI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All the Indian cities that I saw seemed to cover an immense acreage,
+ partly because every modern house has its garden and compound. In a
+ country where land is cheap and servants are legion there need be no
+ congestion, and, so far, the Anglo-Indian knows little or nothing of the
+ embarrassments of dwellers in New York or London. To every one in India
+ falls naturally a little faithful company of assistants to oil the wheels
+ of life&mdash;groom, gardener, butler and so forth&mdash;and a spacious
+ dwelling-place to think of England in, and calculate the variable value of
+ the rupee, and wonder why the dickens So-and-so got his knighthood. Agra
+ seemed to me to be the most widespreading city of all; but very likely it
+ is not. In itself it is far from being the most interesting, but it has
+ one building of great beauty&mdash;the Pearl Mosque in the Fort&mdash;and
+ one building of such consummate beauty as to make it a place of pilgrimage
+ that no traveller would dare to avoid&mdash;the Taj Mahal. Whether or not
+ the Taj Mahal is the most enchanting work of architecture in the world I
+ leave it to more extensive travellers to say. To my eyes it has an
+ unearthly loveliness which I make no effort to pass on to others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Taj Mahal was built by that inspired friend of architecture, Shah
+ Jahan, as the tomb of the best beloved of his wives, Arjmand Banu, called
+ Mumtaz-i-Mahal or Pride of the Palace. There she lies, and there lies her
+ husband. I wonder how many of the travellers who stand entranced before
+ this mausoleum, in sunshine and at dusk or under the moon, and who have
+ not troubled about its history, realise that Giotto's Tower in Florence is
+ three centuries older, and St. Peter's in Rome antedates it by a little,
+ and St. Paul's Cathedral in London is only twenty or thirty years younger.
+ Yet so it is. In India one falls naturally into the way of thinking of
+ everything that is not of our own time as being of immense age, if not
+ prehistoric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Opinions differ as to the respective beauties of Agra Fort and Delhi Fort,
+ but in so far as the enclosures themselves are considered I give my vote
+ unhesitatingly to Delhi. Yet when one thinks also of what can be seen from
+ the ramparts, then the palm goes instantly to Agra, for its view of the
+ Taj Mahal. It is tragic, walking here, to think of the last days of Shah
+ Jahan, who brought into being both the marble palace and the wonderful
+ Moti-Masjid or marble mosque. For in 1658 his son, Aurungzebe, deposed him
+ and for the rest of his life he was imprisoned in these walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His grandfather, Akbar, the other great Agra builder, was made of sterner
+ stuff. All Shah Jahan's creations&mdash;the Taj, the marble mosque, the
+ palaces both here and at Delhi, even the great Jama Masjid at Delhi,&mdash;have
+ a certain sensuous quality. They are not exactly decadent, but they
+ suggest sweetness rather than strength. The Empire had been won, and Shah
+ Jahan could indulge in luxury and ease. But Akbar had had to fight, and he
+ remained to the end a man of action, and we see his character reflected in
+ his stronghold Fatehpur-Sikri, which one visits from Agra and never
+ forgets. If I were asked to say which place in India most fascinated me
+ and touched the imagination I think I should name this dead city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Akbar, the son of Babar, is my hero among the Moguls, and this was Akbar's
+ chosen home, until scarcity of water forced him to abandon it for Agra.
+ Akbar, the noblest of the great line of Moguls whose splendour ended in
+ 1707 with the death of Aurungzebe, came to the throne in 1556, only eight
+ years before Shakespeare was born, and died in 1605, and it is interesting
+ to realise how recent were his times, the whole suggestion of
+ Fatehpur-Sikri being one of very remote antiquity. Yet when it was being
+ built so modern a masterpiece as <i>Hamlet</i> was being written and
+ played. Those interested in the Great Moguls ought really to visit
+ Fatehpur-Sikri before Delhi or Agra, because Akbar was the grandfather of
+ Shah Jahan. But there can be no such chronological wanderings in India.
+ Have we not already seen Humayun's Tomb, outside Delhi?&mdash;and Humayun
+ was Akbar's father.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ They say the leopard and the jackal keep
+ The courts where Akbar gloried....
+&mdash;this adaptation of FitzGerald's lines ran through my mind as we passed
+from room to room and tower to tower of Fatehpur-Sikri. There is nothing
+to compare with it, except perhaps Pompeii. And in that comparison one
+realises how impossible it is at a hazard to date an Indian ruin, for,
+as I have said, Fatehpur-Sikri is from the days of Elizabeth, while
+Pompeii was destroyed in the first century, and yet Pompeii in many ways
+seems less ancient.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The walls of Fatehpur-Sikri are seven miles round and the city rises to
+ the summits of two steep hills. It was on the higher one that Akbar set
+ his palace. Civilisation has run a railway through the lower levels; the
+ old high road still climbs the hill under the incredibly lofty walls of
+ the palace. The royal enclosure is divided into all the usual courtyards
+ and apartments, but they are on a grander scale. Also the architecture is
+ more mixed. Here is the swimming bath; here are the cool, dark rooms for
+ the ladies of the harem in the hottest days, with odd corners where Akbar
+ is said to have played hide-and-seek with them; here is the hall where
+ Akbar, who kept an open mind on religion, listened to, and disputed with,
+ dialecticians of varying creeds&mdash;himself seated in the middle, and
+ the doctrinaires in four pulpits around him; here is the Mint; here is the
+ house of the Turkish queen, with its elaborate carvings and decorations;
+ here is the girls' school, with a courtyard laid out for human chess, the
+ pieces being slave-girls; here is a noble mosque; here is the vast court
+ where the great father of his people administered justice, or what
+ approximated to it, and received homage. Here are the spreading stables
+ and riding school; here is even the tomb of a favourite elephant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here is the marble tomb of the Saint, the Shaikh Salim, whose holiness
+ brought it about that the Emperor became at last the father of a son&mdash;none
+ other than Jahangir. The shrine is visited even to this day by childless
+ wives, who tie shreds of their clothing to the lattice-work of a marble
+ window as an earnest of their maternal worthiness. It is visited also by
+ the devout for various purposes, among others by those whose horses are
+ sick and who nail votive horseshoes to the great gate. According to
+ tradition the mother of Jahangir was a Christian named Miriam, and her
+ house and garden may be seen, the house having the traces of a fresco
+ which by those who greatly wish it can be believed to represent the
+ Annunciation. Tradition, however, is probably wrong, and the princess was
+ from Jaipur and a true Mussulwoman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From every height&mdash;and particularly from the Panch Mahal's roof&mdash;one
+ sees immense prospects and realises what a landmark the stronghold of
+ Fatehpur-Sikri must have been to the dwellers in the plains; but no view
+ is the equal of that which bursts on the astonished eyes at the great
+ north gateway, where all Rajputana is at one's feet. I do not pretend to
+ any exhaustive knowledge of the gates of the world, but I cannot believe
+ that there can be others set as this Gate of Victory is in the walls of a
+ palace, at the head of myriad steps, on the very top of a commanding rock
+ and opening on to thousands of square miles of country. Having seen the
+ amazing landscape one descends the steps to the road, and looking up is
+ astonished and exalted by seeing the gate from below. Nothing so grand has
+ ever come into my ken. The Taj Mahal is unforgettingly beautiful; but this
+ glorious gate in the sky has more at once to exercise and stimulate the
+ imagination and reward the vision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the gate are the words: "Isa (Jesus), on whom be peace, said: 'The
+ world is a bridge; pass over it, but build no house on it. The world
+ endures but an hour; spend it in devotion.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having seen Fatehpur-Sikri, where Akbar lived and did more than build a
+ house, it is a natural course to return to Agra by way of Sikandra, where
+ he was buried. Sikandra is like the Taj Mahal and Humayun's Tomb in
+ general disposition&mdash;the mausoleum itself being in the centre of a
+ garden. But it is informed by a more sombre spirit. The burial-place of
+ the mighty Emperor is in the very heart of the building, gained by a
+ sloping passage lit by an attendant with a torch. Here was Akbar laid,
+ while high above, on the topmost stage of the mausoleum, in the full
+ light, is his cenotoph of marble, with the ninety-nine names of Allah
+ inscribed upon it. Near the cenotaph is a marble pillar on which once was
+ set the Koh-i-noor diamond, chief of Akbar's treasures. To-day it is part
+ of the English regalia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LUCKNOW
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Ridge at Delhi is a sufficiently moving reminder of the Indian Mutiny;
+ but it is at Lucknow that the most poignant phases are re-enacted. At
+ Delhi may be seen, preserved for ever, the famous buildings which the
+ British succeeded in keeping&mdash;Hindu Rao's house, and the Observatory,
+ and Flagstaff Tower, the holding of which gave them victory; while in the
+ walls of the Kashmir Gate our cannon balls are still visibly imbedded.
+ There is also the statue of John Nicholson in the Kudsia Garden, and in
+ the little Museum of the Fort are countless souvenirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lucknow was the centre of the tragedy, and the Residency is preserved
+ as a sacred spot. Not even the recent Great War left in its track any more
+ poignant souvenirs of fortitude and disaster than the little burial ground
+ here, around the ruins of the church, where those who fell in the Mutiny
+ and those who fought or suffered in the Mutiny are lying. Long ago as it
+ was&mdash;1857&mdash;there are still a few vacant lots destined to be
+ filled. Chief of the tombstones that bear the honoured names is that of
+ the heroic defender who kept upon the topmost roof the banner of England
+ flying. It has the simple and touching inscription: "Here lies Henry
+ Lawrence, who tried to do his duty. May the Lord have mercy on his soul!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Residency every step of the siege and relief can be followed. I was
+ there first on a serene evening after rain; and but for some tropical
+ trees it might have been an English scene. All that was lacking was a
+ thrush or blackbird's note; but the grass was as soft and green as at home
+ and the air as sweet. I shall long retain the memory of the contrast
+ between the incidents which give this enclosure its unique place in
+ history and the perfect calm brooding over all. And whenever any one calls
+ my attention to a Bougainvillaea I shall say, "Ah! But you should see the
+ Bougainvillaea in the Residency garden at Lucknow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everywhere that I went in India I found this noble lavish shrub in full
+ flower, but never wearing such a purple as at Lucknow. The next best was
+ in the Fort at Delhi. It was not till I reached Calcutta that I caught any
+ glimpse of the famous scarlet goldmore tree in leaf; but I saw enough to
+ realise how splendid must be the effect of an avenue of them. Bombay,
+ however, was rich in hedges of poinsettia, and they serve as an
+ introduction to the goldmore's glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving the Residency I should like to quote a passage from the
+ little brochure on the defence of Lucknow which Sir Harcourt Butler, the
+ Governor of the United Provinces, with characteristic thoughtfulness has
+ prepared for the use of his guests. "The visitor to the Residency," he
+ wrote, thinking evidently of a similar evening to that on which we visited
+ it, "who muses on the past and the future, may note that upon the spot
+ where the enemy's assault was hottest twin hospitals for Europeans and
+ Indians have been erected by Oudh's premier Taluqdar, the Maharaja of
+ Balrampur; and as the sun sets over the great city, lingering awhile on
+ the trim lawns and battered walls which link the present with the past, a
+ strong hope may come to him, like a distant call to prayer, that old
+ wounds may soon be healed, and old causes of disunion may disappear, and
+ that Englishmen and Indians, knit together by loyalty to their beloved
+ Sovereign, may be as brothers before the altar of the Empire, bearing the
+ Empire's burden, and sharing its inestimable privileges, and, it may be,
+ adding something not yet seen or dreamt of to its world-wide and
+ weather-beaten fame."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I left Lucknow with regret, and would advise any European with time to
+ spare, and the desire to be at once civilised and warm, to think seriously
+ of spending a winter there instead of in the illusory sunshine of the
+ Riviera, or the comparative barbarity of Algiers. The journey is longer,
+ but the charm of the place would repay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A TIGER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To have the opportunity of hunting a tiger&mdash;on an elephant too&mdash;which
+ by a stroke of luck fell to me, is to experience the un-English character
+ of India at its fullest. Almost everything else could be reproduced
+ elsewhere&mdash;the palaces, the bazaars, the caravans, the mosques and
+ temples with their worshippers&mdash;but not the jungle, the Himalayas,
+ the vast swamps through which our elephants waded up to the Plimsoll, the
+ almost too painful ecstasies of the pursuit of an eater of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The master of the chase, who has many tigers to his name, was Sir Harcourt
+ Butler, whose hospitality is famous, so large and warm is it, and so
+ minute, and it was because he was not satisfied that the ordinary
+ diversions of the "Lucknow Week" were sufficient for his guests, that he
+ impulsively arranged a day's swamp-deer shooting on the borders of Nepaul.
+ The time was short, or of elephants there would have been seventy or more;
+ as it was, we were apologised to (there were only about six of us) for the
+ poverty of the supply, a mere five and twenty being obtainable. But to
+ these eyes, which had never seen more than six elephants at once, and
+ those in the captivity either of a zoo or a circus, a row of five and
+ twenty was astounding. They were waiting for us on the plain, at a spot
+ distant some score of miles by car, through improvised roads, from the
+ station, whither an all-night railway journey had borne us. The name of
+ the station, if I ever knew it, I have forgotten: there was no room in my
+ heated brain for such trifles; but I have forgotten nothing else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was after an hour and a half's drive in the cool and spicy early
+ morning air&mdash;between the fluttering rags on canes which told the
+ drivers how to steer&mdash;that we came suddenly in sight of some distant
+ tents and beside them an immense long dark inexplicable mass which through
+ the haze seemed now and then to move. As we drew nearer, this mass was
+ discerned to be a row of elephants assembled in line ready to salute the
+ Governor. The effect was more impressive and more Eastern than anything I
+ had seen. Grotesque too&mdash;for some had painted faces and gilded toes,
+ and not a few surveyed me with an expression in which the comic spirit was
+ too noticeable. Six or seven had howdahs, the rest blankets: those with
+ howdahs being for the party and its leader, Bam Bahadur, a noted shikaree;
+ and the others to carry provisions and bring back the spoil. On the neck
+ of each sat an impassive mahout.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To one to whom the pen is mightier than the gun and whose half a century's
+ bag contains only a few rabbits, a hedgehog and a moorhen, it is no
+ inconsiderable ordeal to be handed a repeating rifle and some dozens of
+ cartridges and be told that that is your elephant&mdash;the big one there,
+ with the red ochre on its forehead. To be on an elephant in the jungle
+ without the responsibilities of a lethal weapon would be sufficient thrill
+ for one day: but to be expected also to deal out death was too much. In
+ the company of others, however, one can do anything; and I gradually
+ ascended to the top, not, as the accomplished hunters did, by placing a
+ foot on the trunk and being swung heavenwards, but painfully, on a ladder;
+ by my side being a very keen Indian youth, the son of a minor chieftain,
+ who spoke English perfectly and was to instruct me in Nimrod's lore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the procession started, and for a while discomfort set acutely in,
+ for the movement of a howdah is short and jerky, and it takes some time
+ both to adjust oneself to it and to lose the feeling that the elephant
+ sooner or later&mdash;and probably sooner&mdash;must trip and fall. But
+ the glory of the morning, the urgency of our progress, the novelty and
+ sublimity of the means of transport, the strangeness of the scene, and my
+ companion's speculations on the day's promise, overcame any personal want
+ of ease and I forgot myself in the universal. Our destination was a series
+ of marshes some six miles away, where the gonds&mdash;or swamp-deer&mdash;were
+ usually found, and we were divided up, some elephants, of which mine was
+ one, taking the left wing, with instructions on reaching a certain spot to
+ wait there for the deer who would move off in that direction; others
+ taking the right wing; and others beating up the middle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We began with a trial of nervous stamina&mdash;for a river far down in its
+ bed below us almost immediately occurred, and this had to be crossed. I
+ abandoned all hope as the elephant descended the bank almost, as it
+ seemed, perpendicularly, and plunged into the water with an enormous
+ splash. But after he had squeeged through, extricating himself with a
+ gigantic wrench, the ground was level for a long while, and there was time
+ to look around and recollect one's fatalism. Far ahead in a blue mist were
+ the Himalayas. All about were unending fields, with here and there white
+ cattle grazing. Cranes stretched their necks above the grass; now and then
+ a herd of blackbuck (which were below our hunting ambitions) scampered
+ away; the sky was full of wild-duck and other water-fowl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the hunting of the gond I should have something to say had not a
+ diversion occurred which relegated that lively and elusive creature to an
+ obscure place in the background. We had finished the beat, and most of us
+ had emerged from the swamp to higher ground where an open space, or
+ maidan, corresponding to a drive in an English preserve, but on the grand
+ scale, divided it from the jungle&mdash;all our thoughts being set upon
+ lunch&mdash;when suddenly across this open space passed a blur of yellow
+ and black only a few yards from the nearest elephant. It was so unexpected
+ and so quick that even the trained eyes of my companion were uncertain.
+ "Did you see?" he asked me in a voice of hushed and wondering awe. "Could
+ that have been a tiger?" I could not say, but I understood his excitement.
+ For the tiger is the king of Indian carnivorae, the most desired of all
+ game. Hunters date their lives by them: such and such a thing happened not
+ on the anniversary of their wedding day; not when their boy went to
+ Balliol; not when they received the K.C.I.E.; but in the year that they
+ shot this or that man-eater.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That a tiger had really chanced upon us we soon ascertained. Also that it
+ had been hit by the rifle on the first elephant and had disappeared into
+ the jungle, which consisted hereabouts of a grass some twenty feet high,
+ bleached by the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Council of War followed, and we were led by Bam Bahadur on a rounding-up
+ manoeuvre. According to his judgment the tiger would remain just inside
+ the cover, and our duty was therefore to make a wide detour and then
+ advance in as solid a semicircle as possible upon him and force him again
+ into the open, where the hunter who had inflicted the first wound was to
+ remain stationed. Accordingly all the rest of us entered the jungle in
+ single file, our elephants treading down the grass with their great
+ irresistible feet or wrenching it away with their invincible trunks. It
+ was now that the shikaree was feeling the elephant shortage. Had there
+ been seventy-five instead of only twenty-five, he said, all would be well:
+ he could then form a cordon such as no tiger might break through. For lack
+ of these others, when the time came to turn and advance upon our prey he
+ caused fires to be lighted here and there where the gaps were widest, so
+ that we forged onwards not only to the accompaniment of the shrill cries
+ of the mahouts and the noise of plunging and overwhelming elephants, but
+ to the fierce roar and crackle of burning stalks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, after an hour in this bewildering tangle, with the universe
+ filled with sound and strangeness, and the scent of wood smoke mingling
+ with the heat of the air, and the lust of the chase in our veins, we drew
+ to the spot where the animal was guessed to be hiding, and knew that the
+ guess was true by the demeanour of the elephants. Real danger had suddenly
+ entered into the adventure; and they showed it. A wounded tiger at bay can
+ do desperate things, and some of the elephants now refused to budge
+ forward any more, or complied only with terrified screams. Some of the
+ unarmed mahouts were also reluctant, and shouted their fears. But the
+ shikaree was inexorable. There the tiger was, and we must drive it out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Closer and closer we drew, until every elephant's flank was pressing
+ against its neighbour, the outside ones being each at the edge of the open
+ space; in the middle of which was the twenty-fifth with its vigilant rider
+ standing tense with his rifle to his shoulder. The noise was now
+ deafening. Every one was uttering something, either to scare the tiger or
+ to encourage the elephants or his neighbour or possibly himself; while now
+ and then from the depths of the grass ahead of us came an outraged growl,
+ with more than a suggestion of contempt in it for such unsportsmanship as
+ could array twenty-five elephants, half a hundred men and a dozen rifles
+ against one inoffensive wild beast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then suddenly the grass waved, there was a rustle and rush and a snarl
+ of furious rage, and once again a blur of yellow and black crossed the
+ open space. Six or more reports rang out, and to my dying day I shall
+ remember, with mixed feelings, that one of these reports was the result of
+ pressure on a trigger applied by a finger belonging to me. That the tiger
+ was hit again&mdash;by other bullets than mine&mdash;was certain, but
+ instead of falling it disappeared into the jungle on the other side of the
+ maidan, and again we were destined to employ enclosing tactics. It was now
+ intensely hot, but nobody minded; and we were an hour and a half late for
+ lunch, but nobody minded: the chase was all! The phrase "out for blood"
+ had taken on its literal primitive meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second rounding-up was less simple than the first, because the tiger
+ had more choice of hiding places; but again our shikaree displayed his
+ wonderful intuition, and in about an hour we had ringed the creature in.
+ That this was to be the end was evident from the electrical purposefulness
+ which animated the old hands. The experienced shots were carefully
+ disposed, and my own peace of mind was not increased by the warning "If
+ the tiger leaps on your elephant, don't shoot"&mdash;the point being that
+ novices can be very wild with their rifles under such conditions. As the
+ question "What shall I do instead?" was lost in the tumult, the latter
+ stages of this momentous drama were seen by these eyes less steadily and
+ less whole than I could have wished. But I saw the tiger spring, growling,
+ at an elephant removed some four yards from mine, and I saw it driven back
+ by a shot from one of the native hunters. And then when, after another
+ period of anxious expectancy, it emerged again from the undergrowth, and
+ sprang towards our host, I saw him put two bullets into it almost
+ instantaneously; and the beautiful obstinate creature fell, never to rise
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SACRED CITY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The devout Hindu knows in Benares the height of ecstasy: but, if I am
+ typical, the European experiences there both discomfort and inquietude.
+ Nowhere else in India did I feel so foreign, so alien. To be of cool
+ Christian traditions and an Occidental, an inquisitive sightseer among
+ these fervent pilgrims intent upon their pious duties and rapt in
+ exaltation and unthinking inflexible belief, was in itself disconcerting,
+ almost to the point of shame; while the pilgrims were so remarkably of a
+ different world, a different era, that one felt lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, however, is not all. India is never too sanitary, except where the
+ English are in their own strongholds, but Benares&mdash;at any rate the
+ parts which the tourist must visit&mdash;is least scrupulous in such
+ matters. The canonization of the cow must needs carry a penalty with it,
+ and Benares might be described as a sanctified byre without any labouring
+ Hercules in prospect. Godliness it may have, but cleanliness is very
+ distant. The streets, too, seem to be narrower and more congested than
+ those in any other city; so that it is often embarrassingly difficult to
+ treat the approaching ruminants with the respect due to them. Fortunately
+ they are seldom anything but mild and unaggressive. Part perplexed, part
+ inquisitive, and part contemptuous, they are met everywhere, while in one
+ of the temples in which the unbeliever may (to his great contentment) do
+ no more than stand at the entrance, they are frankly worshipped. In
+ another temple monkeys are revered too, careering about the walls and
+ courtyards and being fed by the curious and the devout.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holiness is not only the peculiar characteristic of Benares: it is also
+ its staple industry. In the streets there is a shrine at every few feet,
+ while the shops where little lingams are for sale must be numbered by
+ hundreds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief glory of Benares is, however, the Ganges, on one side of which
+ is the teeming sweltering city with its palaces and temples heaped high
+ for two or three miles, and bathers swarming at the river's edge; while
+ the other bank is flat and bare. A watering-place front on the ocean's
+ shore does not end more suddenly and completely. There is nothing that I
+ have seen with which to compare the north bank of the Ganges, with the
+ morning sun on its many-coloured façades and towers, but Venice. As one is
+ rowed slowly down the river it is of Venice that one instinctively thinks.
+ As in Venice, the palaces are of various colours, pink and red and yellow
+ and blue, and the sun has crumbled their façades in the same way. But
+ there is this difference&mdash;that over the Benares roofs the monkeys
+ scamper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually Venice is forgotten as the novel interest of the scene captures
+ one's whole attention. At each of the ghauts (a landing place or steps)
+ variegated masses of pilgrims&mdash;no matter how early the hour, and to
+ see them rightly one ought to start quite by six&mdash;are making their
+ ablutions and deriving holiness from the yellow tide. You saw them
+ yesterday trudging wearily through the streets, the sacred city at last
+ reached; and here they are in their thousands, brown and glistening. They
+ are of every age: quite old white-bearded men and withered women,
+ meticulously serious in their ritual, and then boys and girls deriving
+ also a little fun from their immersion. Here and there the bathing ghaut
+ is diversified by a burning ghaut, and one may catch a glimpse of the
+ extremities of the corpse twisting among the faggots. Here and there is a
+ boat or raft in which a priest is seated under his umbrella, fishing for
+ souls as men in punts on the Thames fish for roach. And over all is the
+ pitiless sun, hot even now, before breakfast, but soon to be unbearable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was not sorry when the voyage ended and we returned to the Maharajah's
+ Guest House for a little repose and refreshment, before visiting the early
+ Buddhist stronghold at Sarnath, the "Deer Park," where the Master first
+ preached his doctrine and whither his five attendants sought a haven after
+ they had forsaken him. Drifting about its ruins and contemplating the
+ glorious capital of the famous Asoka column&mdash;all that has been
+ preserved&mdash;I found myself murmuring the couplet,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With a friendly Buddhist priest I seek respite from
+ the strife
+ And manifold anomalies which go to make up life&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ but the odds are that even the early Buddhists were not immune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CALCUTTA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Calcutta and Bombay are strangely different&mdash;so different that they
+ can only be contrasted. Bombay, first and foremost, has the sea, and I can
+ think of nothing more lovely than the sunsets that one watches from the
+ lawn of the Yacht Club or from the promenade on Warder Road. Calcutta has
+ no sea&mdash;nothing but a very difficult tidal river. Calcutta, again,
+ has no Malabar Hill. But then Bombay has no open space to compare with the
+ Maidan; and for all its crowded bazaars it has no street so diversified
+ and interesting as Harrison Road. It has no Chinatown. Its climate is
+ enervating where that of Calcutta, if not bracing&mdash;and no one could
+ call it that&mdash;at any rate does not extract every particle of vigour
+ from the European system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the special glory of Calcutta is the Maidan, that vast green space
+ which, unlike so many parks, spreads itself at the city's feet. One does
+ not have to seek it: there it is, with room for every one and a
+ race-course and a cricket-ground to boot. And if there is no magic in the
+ evening prospect such as the sea and its ships under the flaming or
+ mysterious enveiling sky can offer to the eye at Bombay, there is a
+ quality of golden richness in the twilight over Calcutta, as seen across
+ the Maidan, through its trees, that is unique. I rejoiced in it daily.
+ This twilight is very brief, but it is exquisite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is easier in Calcutta to be suddenly transported to England than in any
+ other Indian city that I visited. There are, it is true, more statues of
+ Lord Curzon than we are accustomed to; but many of the homes are quite
+ English, save for the multitude of servants; Government House, serene and
+ spacious and patrician, is a replica of Kedlestone Hall in Derbyshire: the
+ business buildings within and without are structurally English, and the
+ familiar Scotch accent sounds everywhere; but the illusion is most
+ complete in St. John's Church, that very charming, cool, white and
+ comfortable sanctuary, in the manner of Wren, and in St. Andrew's too.
+ Secluded here, the world shut off, one might as well be in some urban
+ conventicle at home on a sunny August day, as in the glamorous East. St.
+ John's particularly I shall remember: its light, its distinction, its
+ surrounding verdancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ROSE AYLMER
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ah, what avails the sceptred race,
+ Ah, what the form divine!
+ What every virtue, every grace!
+ Rose Aylmer, all were thine!
+
+ Rose Aylmer, whom these wakeful eyes
+ May weep, but never see,
+ A night of memories and sighs
+ I consecrate to thee.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ One curious task which I set myself in Calcutta was to find Rose Aylmer's
+ grave, for it was there that, in 1800, the mortal part of the lady whom
+ Landor immortalised was buried. But I tried in vain. I walked for hours
+ amid the sombre pyramidal tombs beneath which the Calcutta English used to
+ be laid, among them, in 1815, Thackeray's father, but I found no trace of
+ her whom I sought. I have seen many famous cemeteries, all depressing,
+ from Kensal Green to Genoa, from Rock Creek to Montmartre, but none can
+ approach in its forlorn melancholy the tract of stained and crumbling
+ sarcophagi packed so close as almost to touch each other, in the burial
+ ground off Rawdon Street and Park Street. Let no one establish a monument
+ of cement over me. Any material rather than that!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ JOB AND JOE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If I did not find Rose Aylmer's tomb, I found, in St. John's pleasant
+ God's Acre, the comely mausoleum of Job Charnock, and this delighted me,
+ because for how long has been ringing in my ears that line&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The tall pale widow is mine, Joe, the little brown
+ girl's for you."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ which I met with so many years ago in "The Light That Failed," where the
+ Nilghai sings it to his own music! He got it, he said, from a tombstone,
+ in a distant land; and the tombstone is now incorporated with Job
+ Charnock's, the distant land being India; but the verses I have had to
+ collect elsewhere. I found them in Calcutta, in my host's library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joe was Joseph, or Josiah, Townsend, a pilot of the Ganges, and tradition
+ has it that he and Job Charnock, who, as an officer of the East India
+ Company, founded Calcutta in 1690, saved a pretty young Hindu widow from
+ ascending her husband's funeral pyre and committing suttee. Tradition
+ states further that Job Charnock and his bride "lived lovingly for many
+ years and had several children," until in due time she was buried in the
+ mausoleum at St. John's, where her husband sacrificed a cock on each
+ anniversary of her death ever after. The story has been examined and found
+ to be improbable, but Charnock was a bold fellow who might easily have
+ started many legends; and the poem remains, and if there is a livelier, I
+ should like to know of it. I have been at the agreeable pains of
+ reconstructing the verses as they were probably written, so that there are
+ two more than the Nilghai sang. The whole is a very curious haunting
+ ballad, leaving us with the desire to know much more of the lives of both
+ men&mdash;Job Charnock the frontiersman, and Joseph Townsend, "skilful and
+ industrious, a kind father and a useful friend," who could navigate not
+ only the Ganges but the shifting Hooghli. Rarely can so much mixed
+ autobiography and romance have been packed into six stanzas&mdash;and here
+ too the adventurous East and West meet:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I've shipped my cable, messmates, I'm dropping down
+ with the tide;
+ I have my sailing orders while ye at anchor ride,
+ And never, on fair June morning, have I put out to sea
+ With clearer conscience, or better hope, or heart more light and free.
+
+ An Ashburnham! A Fairfax! Hark how the corslets ring!
+ Why are the blacksmiths out to-day, beating those men at the spring?
+ Ho, Willie, Hob and Cuddie!&mdash;bring out your boats amain,
+ There's a great red pool to swim them o'er, yonder in Deadman's Lane.
+
+ Nay, do not cry, sweet Katie&mdash;only a month afloat
+ And then the ring and the parson, at Fairlight Church, my doat.
+ The flower-strewn path&mdash;the Press Gang! No, I shall never see
+ Her little grave where the daisies wave in the breeze on Fairlight Lee.
+
+ "Shoulder to shoulder, Joe, my boy, into the crowd like a wedge!
+ Out with the hangers, messmates, but do not strike with the edge!"
+ Cries Charnock, "Scatter the faggots! Double that Brahmin in two!
+ The tall pale widow is mine, Joe, the little brown girl for you."
+
+ Young Joe (you're nearing sixty), why is your hide so dark?
+ Katie had fair soft blue eyes&mdash;who blackened yours? Why, hark!
+ The morning gun! Ho, steady! The arquebuses to me;
+ I've sounded the Dutch High Admiral's heart as my lead doth sound the
+ sea.
+
+ Sounding, sounding the Ganges&mdash;floating down with the tide,
+ Moor me close by Charnock, next to my nut-brown bride.
+ My blessing to Katie at Fairlight&mdash;Howell, my thanks to you&mdash;
+ Steady!&mdash;We steer for Heaven through scud drifts cold and blue.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ EXIT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I arrived in Bombay on the last day of 1919 and embarked at Calcutta for
+ Japan on the evening of February 17th, seven weeks later. But to embark at
+ Calcutta is not to leave it, for we merely dropped down the river a short
+ distance that night, and for the next day and a half we were in the
+ Hooghli, sounding all the way. It is a difficult river to emerge from; nor
+ do I recommend any one else to travel, as I did, on a boat with a forward
+ deck cargo of two or three hundred goats on the starboard side and half as
+ many monkeys on the port, with a small elephant tethered between and a
+ cage of leopards adjacent. These, the property of an American dealer in
+ wild animals, were intended for sale in the States; all but one of the
+ leopards, which, being lame, he had decided to kill, to provide a "robe"
+ for his wife. Nothing could be more different than the careless aimless
+ activities of the monkeys I had seen among the trees between Agra and
+ Delhi and scampering over the parapets of Benares, all thieves and
+ libertines with a charter, and the restriction of these poor cowering
+ mannikins, overcrowded in their cages, with an abysmal sorrow in their
+ eyes. Many died on the voyage, and I think the Indian Government should
+ look into the question of their export very narrowly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ JAPAN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTORY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I ought not to write about Japan at all, for I was there but three short
+ weeks, and rain or snow fell almost all the time, and I sailed for America
+ on the very day that the cherry blossom festivities began. But&mdash;well,
+ there is only one Fujiyama, and it is surpassingly beautiful and
+ satisfying&mdash;the perfect mountain&mdash;and I should feel contemptible
+ if I did not add my eulogy of it&mdash;my gratitude&mdash;to all the
+ others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since, then, I am to say something of Fuji, let the way be paved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE LITTLE LAND
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One is immediately struck, on landing at Kobe&mdash;and continually after&mdash;by
+ the littleness of Japan. The little flimsy houses, the little flimsy
+ shops, the small men, the toylike women, the tiny children, as numerous
+ and like unto each other as the pebbles on the shore&mdash;these are
+ everywhere. But although small of stature the Japanese men are often very
+ powerfully built and many of them suggest great strength. They are taking
+ to games, too. While I was in the country baseball was a craze, and boys
+ were practising pitching and catching everywhere, even in the streets of
+ the cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Littleness&mdash;with which is associated the most delicate detail and
+ elaborate finish&mdash;is the mark also of modern Japanese art. In the
+ curiosity shops whatever was massive or largely simple was Chinese. Even
+ the royal palaces at Kyoto are small, the rooms, exquisite as they are,
+ with perfect joinery and ancient paintings, being seldom more than a few
+ feet square, with very low ceilings. I went over two of these palaces,
+ falling into the hands, at each, of English-speaking officials whose
+ ciceronage was touched with a kind of rapture. At the Nijo, especially,
+ was my guide an enthusiast, becoming lyrical over the famous cartoons of
+ the "Wet Heron" and the "Sleeping Sparrows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In India I had grown accustomed to removing my shoes at the threshold of
+ mosques. There it was out of deference to Allah, but in Japan the
+ concession is demanded solely in the interests of floor polish, and you
+ take your shoes off not only in palaces and houses but in some of the
+ shops. It gave one an odd burglarious feeling to be creeping noiselessly
+ from room to room of the Nijo; but there was nothing to steal. The place
+ was empty, save for decoration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a certain amplitude in some of the larger Kyoto temples, with
+ their long galleries and massive gateways, but these only serve to
+ accentuate the littleness elsewhere. In the principal Kyoto temple I had
+ for guide a minute Japanese with the ecstatic passion for trifles that
+ seems to mark his race. A picture representing the miracle of the
+ "Fly-away Sparrows," as he called them, was the treasure on which he
+ concentrated, and next to that he drew my attention to the boards of the
+ gangway uniting two buildings, which, as one stepped on them, emitted a
+ sound that the Japanese believe to resemble the song of Philomela. To me
+ it brought no such memory, and the fact that this effect, common in Japan,
+ is technically known as "a nightingale squeak," perhaps supports my
+ insensitiveness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If old Japan is to be found anywhere it is in Kyoto&mdash;in spite of its
+ huge factory chimneys. In Tokio, complete European dress is common in the
+ streets, but in Kyoto it is the exception. Tokio also wears boots, but
+ Kyoto is noisy with pattens night and day. Not only are there countless
+ shops in Kyoto given up to porcelain, carvings, screens, bronzes, old
+ armour, and so forth, but no matter how trumpery the normal stock in trade
+ of the other shops, a number of them have a little glass case&mdash;a shop
+ within a shop, as it were&mdash;in which a few rare and ancient articles
+ of beauty are kept. A great deal of Japan is expressed in this pretty
+ custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE RICE FIELDS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ My first experience of Japanese scenery of any wildness was gained while
+ shooting the rapids of the Katsuragava, an exciting voyage among boulders
+ in a shallow and often very turbulent stream in a steep and craggy valley
+ a few miles from Kyoto. Previous to this expedition I had seen, from the
+ train, only the trim rice fields,&mdash;each a tiny parallelogram with its
+ irrigation channels as a boundary, so carefully tended that there is not a
+ weed in the whole country. Japan is cut up into these absurd little
+ squares, of which twenty and more would go into an ordinary English field.
+ Often the terminal posts are painted a bright red; often a little row of
+ family tombs is there too. The watermill is a common object of the
+ country. But birds are few and animals one sees never. Indeed in all my
+ three weeks I saw no four-footed animals, except a dead rat, two pigs and
+ one cat. I am excluding of course beasts of draught&mdash;horses and
+ bullocks&mdash;which are everywhere. Not a cow, not a sheep, not a dog!
+ but that there are cattle is proved by the proverbial excellence of Kobe
+ steaks, which I tested and can swear to. In all my three weeks, both in
+ cities and the country, I saw only one crying child. Of children there
+ were millions, mostly boys, but only one was unhappy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SURFACE MATERIALISM
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In spite of Kyoto's eight hundred temples I could not get any but a
+ materialistic concept of its inhabitants; and elsewhere this impression
+ was emphasised. A stranger cannot, of course, know; he can but record his
+ feelings, without claiming any authority for them. But I am sure I was
+ never in a country where I perceived fewer indications of any spiritual
+ life. Every one is busy; every one seems to be happy or at any rate not
+ discontented; every one chatters and laughs and is, one feels, a fatalist.
+ Sufficient unto the day! After all, it is the women of a nation that
+ chiefly keep burning the sacred flame and pass it on; but in Japan, I
+ understand, the women are far too busy in pleasing the men to have time
+ for such duties; Japan is run by men for men. It is an unwritten law that
+ a woman must never be anything but gay in her lord's presence, must never
+ for a moment claim the privilege of peevishness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an instance of the Japanese woman's indifference to fate and readiness
+ to oblige, I may say that we had on our ship two or three hundred girls in
+ charge of a duenna or so, who were bound for Honolulu to be married to
+ Japanese settlers there, to whom their photographs had been forwarded.
+ These girls are known as "Picture Brides." At Honolulu their new
+ proprietors awaited them, and I suppose identified and appropriated them,
+ although to the European eye one face differed no whit from another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Japanese have the practical qualities that consort with materialism.
+ They are quick to supply creature comforts; their hotels are well-managed;
+ their cooks are excellent; their sign-posts are numerous and, I believe,
+ very circumstantial; at the railway stations are lists of the show places
+ in the neighbourhood; the telephone is general. But there are strange
+ failings. The roads, for example, are often very bad, although so many
+ motor-cars exist. Even in Tokio the puddles and mud are abominable. There
+ is no fixed rule to force rickshaw men to carry bells. There is no rule of
+ the road at all, so that the driver of a vehicle must be doubly alert,
+ having to make up his mind not only as to what he is going to do himself,
+ but also what the approaching driver is probably going to do. From time to
+ time, I believe, a rule of the road has been tried, but it has always
+ broken down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rickshaw bells are the more important, because the Japanese are not
+ observant. They may see Fuji and stand for hours worshipping a spray of
+ cherry blossom, but they do not see what is coming. Normally they look
+ down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rickshaw is comfortable and speedy; but to be drawn about by a
+ fellow-creature is a humiliating experience and I never ceased to feel too
+ conspicuous and ashamed. I discovered also how easy it is to lose one's
+ temper with these men. I used to sit and wonder if there had ever been a
+ runaway, and I never hired a rickshaw without thinking of Mr. Anstey's
+ story of the talking horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FIRST GLIMPSE OF FUJI
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I left Kyoto for Yokohama on Wednesday night, March 17, 1920, at eleven,
+ and Thursday, March 18, 1920, thus remains with me as a red-letter day,
+ for it was then, at about half-past seven in the morning, that, lifting
+ the blind of my sleeping compartment, I saw&mdash;almost within reach, as
+ it seemed, dazzlingly white under its snow against a clear blue sky, with
+ the sun flooding it with glory&mdash;Fujiyama. I was to see it again
+ several times&mdash;for I went to Myanoshita for that purpose&mdash;but
+ never again so startlingly and wonderfully as this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I am asked to name in a word the most beautiful thing I saw on my
+ travels I mention Fujiyama instantly. There is nothing else to challenge
+ it. Perhaps had I seen Everest from Darjeeling I might have a different
+ story to tell; but I missed it. The Taj? Yes, the Taj is a divine work of
+ man; but it has not the serene lofty isolation of this sublime mountain,
+ rising from the plain alone and immense with almost perfect symmetry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was not to see Fujiyama again for a week or so, but in the meanwhile I
+ saw the Daibutsu, the giant figure of Buddha, at Kamakura, in all its
+ bland placidity. These were the only big things I found in Japan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ TWO FUNERALS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Yokohama is industrial and dirty everywhere but on the drive beside the
+ harbour, and on the Bluff, where the rich foreigners live. I visited one
+ house on this pleasant eminence and there was nothing in it to suggest
+ that it was in Japan any more than in, say, Cheltenham. The form was
+ English, the furniture was English, the pictures and books were English;
+ photographs of school and college cricket elevens gave it the final home
+ touch. Only in the garden were there exotic indications. The English
+ certainly have the knack of carrying their atmosphere with them. I had
+ noticed that often in India; but this Yokohama villa was the completest
+ exemplification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wandering about the city I came one morning on a funeral procession that
+ ought to have pleased Henry Ward Beecher, who, on the only occasion on
+ which I heard him, when he was very old and I was very young, urged upon
+ his hearers the importance of bright colours and flowers instead of the
+ ordinary habiliments and accoutrements of woe. For when a soul is on its
+ way to paradise, he said, we should be glad. The Yokohama cortege was
+ headed by men bearing banners; then came girls all in white, riding in
+ rickshaws; then the gaudy hearse; then priests in rickshaws; and finally
+ the relations and friends. The effect conveyed was not one of melancholy;
+ but even if every one had been in black, impressiveness would have been
+ wanting, for no one can look dignified in a rickshaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compared, however, with a funeral which I saw in Hong-Kong, the Yokohama
+ ceremony was solemnity in essence. The Hong-Kong obsequies were those of a
+ tobacco-magnate's wife and the widower had determined to spare no expense
+ on their thoroughness. He had even offered, but without success, to
+ compensate the tramway company for a suspension of the service, the result
+ of his failure being that every few minutes the procession was held up to
+ permit the cars to go by; which meant that instead of taking only two
+ hours to pass any given point, it took three. The estimated cost of the
+ funeral was one hundred thousand dollars and all Hong-Kong was there to
+ see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Chinese eyes it doubtless had a sombre religious character, but to us
+ it was merely a diverting spectacle of incredible prolongation. We were
+ not wholly to blame in missing its sanctity, for the participants, who
+ were more like mummers than mourners, had all been hired and were enjoying
+ the day off. For the most part they merely wore their fancy dress and
+ walked and talked or played instruments, but now and then there was a
+ dragon and a champion boxing it and these certainly earned their money. At
+ intervals came bearers with trays on which were comforts for the next
+ world or symbolical devices, while, to infinity both in front and behind,
+ banners and streamers and lanterns danced and jogged above all. A
+ miracle-show of the middle ages can have been not unlike it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE LITTLE GEISHA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I left Japan, as I have said, just before the cherry-blossom festivities
+ began, but I was able to see a number of the dances&mdash;which never
+ change but are passed with exactitude, step for step, gesture for gesture
+ and expression for expression, from one geisha to another&mdash;as
+ performed by a child who was being educated for the profession. Although
+ so young she knew accurately upwards of sixty dances, and the pick of
+ these she executed for a few spectators, in a little fragile paper-walled
+ house outside Yokohama, while her adoring aunt played the wistful
+ repetitive accompaniments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little creature&mdash;a mere watch-chain ornament&mdash;had a typical
+ Japanese face, half mask, half mischief, and a tiny high voice which now
+ and then broke into the dance. But dances, strictly speaking, they are
+ not. They are really posturing and the manoeuvres of a fan. To me they are
+ strangely fascinating, and, with the music, almost more so than our
+ Western ballets. But there is a difference between the ballet and the
+ geisha dances, and it is so wide that there is no true comparison; for
+ whereas the ballet stimulates and excites, these Japanese movements
+ hypnotise and lull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MANNERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The public manners of the Japanese are not good. In all my solitary walks
+ about Myanoshita I met with no single peasant who passed the time of day,
+ and in the streets of Tokio English people were being jostled and stared
+ at and treated without respect. It was a moment when Americans were
+ unpopular, and the theory was broached that for fear of missing the chance
+ to be rude to an American the Japanese became rude to all outlanders
+ indiscriminately. One indeed gathered the impression that, except in
+ Kyoto, which is a backwater, foreigners are no longer wanted. "Japan for
+ the Japanese" would seem to be the motto: one day, not far distant, to be
+ amended to "The World for Japan." I shall never forget the humiliation I
+ suffered in a stockbroker's office in Tokio, into which, seeing the words
+ "English spoken" over the door, I had ventured in the hope of being
+ directed to an address I was seeking. Not a word of English did any one
+ know, but the whole staff left its typewriters and desks to come and
+ laugh. I was always willing to remove the gravity of Japanese children by
+ my grotesque Occidentalism, but I have a very real objection to being a
+ butt for the ridicule of grown-ups. Such an incident could not have
+ occurred, I believe, anywhere else. But it is not only the foreigners to
+ whom the Japanese are rude: they do nothing for their fellows either. The
+ want of chivalry in trains and trams was conspicuous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ceremonial manners of the Japanese can, however, be more precise and
+ formal than any I ever witnessed. A wedding reception chanced to be in
+ progress in my Tokio hotel one afternoon, and through the open door I had
+ glimpses of Japanese gentlemen in frock coats bowing to Japanese ladies
+ and making perfect right angles as they did so. So elaborate indeed were
+ the courtesies that to Western eyes they bordered dangerously on
+ burlesque.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The destination that I was seeking when I entered the stockbroker's office
+ was a certain book-store, and when I eventually found it I was asked a
+ question by a Japanese youth that still perplexes me. It was in the
+ English section, the principal volumes in which, as imported to supply
+ Japanese demands, were American, and all bore either upon success in
+ engineering and other professions and crafts, or on the rapid acquirement
+ of wealth. "How to double your income in a week"; "How to get rich
+ quickly"; "How to succeed in business"; and so forth; all preaching, in
+ fact, the new gospel which is doing Japan no good. There were also,
+ however, a certain number of novels, and one of the customers, a boy who
+ looked as though he were still at school, noting my English appearance,
+ brought a translation of Maupassant to me and asked me what "soul" meant&mdash;"A
+ Woman's Soul" being the new title. Now I defy any one with no Japanese to
+ make it clear to a Japanese boy with very little English what a woman's
+ soul is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PLAY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At Tokio I was present for an hour or so at a performance in a national
+ theatre. It had been in progress for a long time when I entered and would
+ continue long after I left, for that is the Japanese custom. In London
+ people with too little to do are on occasion prepared to spend the whole
+ day outside theatres waiting for the doors to open. They will then witness
+ a two and a half hours' performance. But in Japan the plays go on from
+ eleven a.m. to eleven p.m. and the audience bring their sustenance and
+ tobacco with them. The seats are mats on the ground, and the actors reach
+ the stage by a passage through the auditorium as well as from the wings.
+ The scenery is very elementary, and there is always a gate which has to be
+ opened when the characters pass through and closed after them, although it
+ is isolated and has no contiguous wall or fence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of our Western morbid desire for novelty, I am told, troubles the
+ Japanese play-goer, who is prepared to witness the same drama, usually
+ based on an historical event or national legend thoroughly familiar to
+ him, for ever and ever. It is as though the theatres in England were given
+ up exclusively to, say, Shakespeare's Henry IV, V and VI sequence. On the
+ occasion of my visit there was little of what we call acting, but endless
+ elocution. During the performance the attendants walk about, with the
+ persistence of constables during a London police-court hearing, carrying
+ refreshments and little charcoal stoves. The signal for the next act is a
+ deafening clicking noise made by one of the stage hands on two sticks,
+ which gradually rises to a shattering crescendo as the curtain is drawn
+ aside. It must be understood that the theatre that I am describing was set
+ apart for national drama. In others there are topical farces and laughter
+ is continuous; but I did not visit any. On board ship, however, we had a
+ series of performances of such pieces by the Japanese cabin attendants and
+ waiters, many of whom were professional actors. The Japanese passengers
+ enjoyed them immensely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MYANOSHITA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A whole week of my too short stay was given to Myanoshita, whither I was
+ driven by the impossibility of retaining a room in either Yokohama or
+ Tokio, and where I stayed willingly on, out of delight in the place
+ itself. After being cooped up for so long on ships, and kept inactive
+ under the heat of India, it was like a new existence to take immense walks
+ among these mountains in the keen rarified air, even though there was both
+ rain and snow. Myanoshita stands some four thousand feet high and is
+ situated in a valley in which are many summer cottages and health resorts.
+ The heart of this Alpine settlement is the Fujiya Hotel, where I was
+ living, which is kept by an enterprising Americanised and Europeanised
+ Japanese proprietor and his very charming wife, Madame Yamaguchi, whose
+ father was the founder of the house, and, I believe, the discoverer of the
+ district, and who herself is famous as a gracious hostess throughout
+ Japan. No hotel so well or so thoughtfully administered have I ever stayed
+ in; nor was I ever in another where the water for the bath gushes in from
+ a natural hot spring. But hot springs are numerous in this region, while
+ there is a gorge which I visited, some four miles distant, where boiling
+ sulphur hisses and bubbles for ever and aye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the Myanoshita dishes were new to me and welcome. There is an
+ excellent salad called "Slow," and the bamboo, which is Japan's best
+ friend&mdash;serving the nation in scores of ways: as fences, as walls, as
+ water-pipes, as supports, as carrying-poles, as thatch, as fishing-rods&mdash;here
+ found its way into the salad bowl and was not distasteful. The custom of
+ drinking a glass of orange juice before breakfast might well be adopted
+ with us; but not the least of the oddities of England which I realised as
+ I moved about the earth is our unwillingness to eat fruit. Japan also has
+ a perfect mineral water, "Tansan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When not making long expeditions to catch new glimpses of Fuji I roamed
+ about the hill-sides among the little villages, or leaned over crazy
+ bridges to watch the waterfalls beneath; for there is water everywhere,
+ tumbling down to the distant ocean, a wedge of which can be seen from the
+ hotel windows. This Japanese valley might be in Switzerland, save for the
+ absence of any but human life. Not a cow, not a goat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The labourers wear blue linen smocks, usually with some device upon them,
+ and they merge into the landscape as naturally as French or Belgian
+ peasants. These men, whether working on the soil or the roads, or engaged
+ in cutting bamboos or building houses, wear the large straw hats that one
+ sees in the old Japanese prints. Nothing has changed in their dress. But
+ the modernized Japanese, the dweller in the cities or casual visitor to
+ the country, pins his faith to the bowler. The bowler is so much his
+ favourite headgear that he wears it often with native costume on his body.
+ Perhaps it is to Japan that all the bowlers have gone, now that London has
+ taken to the soft Homburg. It was odd to meet groups of these bizarre
+ little men among the precipices: even stranger perhaps were their little
+ ladies, especially on Sunday, in the gayest Japanese clothes, their faces
+ plastered with rice powder and cigarettes in their mouths. Too many of
+ them are disfigured by gold teeth, which are so common in Japan as to be
+ almost the rule. An English resident assured me that I must not assume
+ that the Japanese teeth are therefore unusually defective: often the gold
+ is merely ostentation, a visible sign that the owner of the auriferous
+ mouth is both alive to American progress and can afford it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in Myanoshita Fujiyama has to be sought for and climbed for, the
+ walls of rock that form the valley being so high and enclosing. But the
+ result is worth every effort. Immediately above the hotel is a hill from
+ whose summit the upper part of the enchanted mountain can be seen, and I
+ ascended tortuously to this point within an hour of my arrival. The next
+ day I walked to Lake Hakone (where the Emperor has a summer palace), some
+ eight miles away, in the hope of getting Fuji's white crest reflected on
+ its surface; but a veil of mist enshrouded all. And then twice I went to
+ the edge of the watershed at the head of the valley: once struggling
+ through the snow to the Otome Pass, on an immemorial and nearly
+ perpendicular bridle path, and once by the modern road to the tunnel
+ which, with characteristic address, the Japanese have bored through the
+ rock, thus reducing a very steep gradient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the tunnel the icicles were hanging several feet long and as big as
+ masts, and the air was biting. But one emerged suddenly upon a prospect
+ the wonder of which probably cannot be excelled&mdash;a vast plain far
+ below, made up of verdure and villages and lakes, with distant surrounding
+ heights, and immediately in front, filling half the sky, Fuji himself. It
+ is from this point, and from the ancient Otome Pass, a mile or so away on
+ the same ridge, that the symmetry of the mountain is most perfect; and
+ here one can best appreciate the simplicity of it, the quiet natural ease
+ with which it rises above its neighbours. There was more snow on the
+ slopes than when I had seen it from the train a few days before; and the
+ sky again was without a cloud. I have never been so conscious of majestic
+ serenity, without any concomitant feeling of awe. Fuji is both sublime and
+ human.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No other country has a symbol like this. When the Japanese think of Japan
+ they visualise Fuji: returning exiles crowd the decks for the first
+ glimpse of it; departing exiles with tears in their eyes watch it
+ disappear. There is not a shop window but has Fuji in some representation;
+ it is found in every house; its contours are engraved on teaspoons,
+ embossed on ash-trays. You cannot escape from its counterfeits; but if you
+ have seen it you do not mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When on my way home I found myself in an American picture gallery, either
+ in San Francisco, Chicago, Boston or New York, I lingered longest in the
+ rooms where the coloured prints of the Japanese masters hang&mdash;and
+ America has very fine collections, particularly in Boston&mdash;and I
+ stood longest before those landscapes by Hokusai and Hiroshige in which
+ Fuji occurs. Hokusai in particular venerated the mountain, and in many of
+ his most beautiful pictures people are calling to each other to admire
+ some new and marvellous aspect of it. It was he who drew Fuji as seen
+ through the arch of a breaking wave! I was looking at the British Museum's
+ example of this daring print only a few days ago, and, doing so, living my
+ Myanoshita days again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is much in Japan that is petty, much that is too material and not a
+ little that is disturbing; but Fuji is there too, dominating all, calm and
+ wise and lovely beyond description, and it would be Fuji that lured me
+ back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AMERICA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DEMOCRACY AT HOME
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ My first experience of democracy-in-being followed swiftly upon boarding
+ the steamboat for San Francisco, when "Show this man Number 231" was the
+ American steward's command to a cabin boy. I had no objection to being
+ called a man: far from it; but after years of being called a gentleman it
+ was startling. This happened at Yokohama; and when, in the Customs House
+ at San Francisco, a porter wheeling a truck broke through a queue of us
+ waiting to obtain our quittances, with the careless warning, "Out of the
+ way, fellers!" I knew that here was democracy indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I confess to liking it, although I was to be brought up with another jolt
+ when a notice-board on a grass-plot suddenly confronted me, bearing the
+ words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ {Illustration: KEEP OFF. THIS MEANS YOU.}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I like it. I like the tradition which, once your name is written in
+ the hotel reception book, makes you instantly "Mr. Lucas" to every one in
+ the place. There is a friendliness about it: the hotel is more of a home,
+ or at any rate, less of a barrack, because of it. And yet this universal
+ camaraderie has some odd lapses into formality. The members of clubs in
+ America are far more ceremonious with each other than we are in England.
+ In English clubs the prefix "Mr." is a solecism, but in American clubs I
+ have watched quite old friends and associates whose greetings have been
+ marked almost by pomposity and certainly by ritual. Yet Americans, I
+ should say, are heartier than we; more happy to be with each other; less
+ critical and exacting. They certainly spend less time in discussing each
+ other's foibles. That may be because the dollar is so much more an
+ absorbing theme, but more likely it is because America is a democracy, and
+ the theory of democracy, as I understand it, is to assume that every man
+ is a good fellow until the reverse is proved. I should not like to say
+ that the theory of those of us who live under a monarchy is the opposite,
+ but it seemed to me that Americans are more ready than we to be sociable
+ and tolerant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Try as I might I could never be quick enough to get in first with that
+ delightful American greeting, "Pleased to meet you," or "Glad to know you,
+ Mr. Lucas." I pondered long on the best retort and at last formulated
+ this, but never dared to use it for fear that its genuineness might be
+ suspected: "I shall be sorry when we have to part."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SAN FRANCISCO
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was in San Francisco that I learned&mdash;and very quickly&mdash;that
+ it is as necessary to visit America in order to know what Americans are
+ like as it is to leave one's own country in order to know more about that.
+ Americans when abroad are less hearty, less revealing. They are either
+ suffering from a constraint or an over-assertiveness; and both moods may
+ be due to not being at home. In neither case are they so natural as at
+ home. I suppose that on soil not our own we all tend to be a little
+ over-anxious to proclaim our nationality, to maintain the distinction. In
+ our hats can perhaps be too firmly planted the invisible flag of our
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be this as it may, I very quickly discerned a difference between Americans
+ in America and in England. I found them simple where I had thought of them
+ as the reverse, and now, after meeting others in various parts of the
+ country, even in complex and composite New York, I should say that
+ simplicity is the keynote of the American character. It is in his
+ simplicity that the American differs most from the European. Such
+ simplicity is perfectly consistent with the impatience, the desire for
+ novelty, for brevity, of the American people. We think of them as always
+ wishing to reduce life to formulae, as unwilling to express any surprise,
+ and these tendencies may easily be considered as signs of a tiring
+ civilisation. But in reality they are signs of youth too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ROADS GOOD AND BAD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ San Francisco I shall chiefly recollect (apart from personal reasons) for
+ the sparkling freshness and vigour of the air; for the extent and variety
+ of Golden Gate Park, where I found a bust of Beethoven, but no sign of
+ Bret Harte; for the vast reading-room in the library at Berkeley, a
+ university which is so enchantingly situated, beneath such a sun, and in
+ sight of such a bay, that I marvel that any work can be done there at all;
+ and for the miles and miles of perfect tarmac roads fringed with burning
+ eschscholtzias and gentle purple irises. That was in April. I found
+ elsewhere in America no roads comparable with these. Even around
+ Washington their condition was such that to ride in a motor-car was to
+ experience all the alleged benefits of horseback, while in the
+ Adirondacks, anywhere off the noble Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Highway,
+ with its "T.R." blazonings along the route, one's liver was bent and
+ broken. While I was in America the movement to purchase Roosevelt's house
+ as a national possession was in full swing, but this Memorial Highway
+ strikes the imagination with more force. That was an inspiration, and I
+ hope that the road will never be allowed to fall into disrepair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ UNIVERSITIES, LOVE AND PRONUNCIATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Watching the young men and maidens crowding to a lecture in the Hearst
+ Amphitheatre at Berkeley, under that glorious Californian sky, I was
+ struck by the sensible, frank intimacy of them all, and envied them the
+ advantages that must be theirs over the English methods of segregation at
+ the same age, which, by creating shyness and destroying familiarity, tends
+ to retard if not destroy the natural understanding which ought to subsist
+ between them and if it did would often make life afterwards so much
+ simpler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I asked one of the professors to what extent marriages were made in
+ Berkeley, but he had no statistics. All he could say was that Cupid was
+ very little trouble to the authorities and that Mr. Hoover and Mrs. Hoover
+ first met each other as students at Stanford. And then I asked an
+ ex-member of one of the Sororities and she said that at college one was a
+ good deal in love and a good deal out of it. The romance rarely persisted
+ into later life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She pronounced romance with the accent on the first syllable, whereas
+ somewhere half-way across the Atlantic the accent passes to the second;
+ and why such illogical things should be is a mystery. The differences can
+ be very disconcerting, especially if one refuses to give way. I had an
+ experience to the point when talking with some one in Chicago and wishing
+ to answer carefully his question as to the conditions under which the poor
+ of our great cities live. These are, in my observation, infinitely worse
+ in England than in America. Indeed I hardly saw any poor in America at all&mdash;not
+ poverty as we understand it. But I could not frame my reply because
+ "squalor" (which we pronounce as though it rhymed with "mollor") was the
+ only fitting epithet and he had just used it himself, pronouncing it in
+ the American way&mdash;or at any rate in his American way&mdash;with a
+ long "a." So I turned the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither nation has any monopoly of reasonableness in pronunciation. The
+ American way of saying "advertisement" is more sensible than ours of
+ saying "adver´tisment," since we say "advertise" too. But then, although
+ the Americans say "inquire," just as we do, they illogically put the
+ stress on the first syllable when they talk about an "in´quiry." The Tower
+ of Babel is thus carried up one storey higher. The original idea was
+ merely to confuse languages; it cannot ever have been wished that two
+ friendly peoples should speak the same language differently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I have wandered far from Berkeley and Stanford. I am not sure as to my
+ course of conduct if I had a daughter of seventeen, but I am quite
+ convinced that if I had a son of that age I should send him to an American
+ university for two or three years after his English school. He should then
+ become a citizen of the Anglo-Saxon world indeed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FIRST SIGNS OF PROHIBITION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We had met Prohibition first at Honolulu, not a few of the passengers
+ receiving the shock of their lives on learning at the hotel that only
+ "soft drinks" were permitted. Our second reminder of the new regime came
+ as we entered American waters off the Golden Gate and the ship's bar was
+ formally closed. And then, in San Francisco, we found "dry" land indeed.
+ In this connection let me say that in the hotel I made acquaintance with
+ an official of great power who was new to me: the buttoned boy who
+ rejoices in the proud title of Bell Captain. He gave me a private insight
+ into his precocity (but that is not the word, for all boys in America are
+ men too), and into his influence, by offering to supply me with forbidden
+ fruit, in the shape of whisky, at the modest figure of $25 a bottle. He
+ did not, however, say dollars: like most of his compatriots (and it is a
+ favourite word with them) he said something between "dollars" and
+ "dallars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had, a few days later, in Chicago, a similarly friendly offer from a
+ policeman of whom I had inquired the way. Recognizing an English accent,
+ he had instantly divined what my dearest wish must be. I then asked him
+ how prohibition was affecting the people on his beat. He said that a few
+ drunkards were less comfortable and a few wives more serene; but for the
+ most part he had seen no increase of happiness, and the extra money that
+ it provided was spent either on the movies, dress, or "other foolishness."
+ I did not allow him to refresh me. After a course of American "tough"
+ fiction, of which "Susan Lenox" remains most luridly in the memory, I had
+ a terror of all professional upholders of the law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ R.L.S.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Coming by chance upon the Robert Louis Stevenson memorial at San
+ Francisco, on the edge of Chinatown, I copied its inscription, and in case
+ any reader of these notes may have forgotten its trend I copy it again
+ here; for I do not suppose that its application was intended to cease with
+ the Californian city. It is counsel addressed to the individual, but since
+ nations are but individuals in quantity such ideals cannot be repeated
+ amiss:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be honest; to be kind; to earn a little; to spend a little less; to
+ make upon the whole a family happier for his presence; to renounce when
+ that shall be necessary and not to be embittered; to keep a few friends,
+ but these without capitulation; above all, on the same grim condition, to
+ keep friends with himself&mdash;here is a task for all that man has of
+ fortitude and delicacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a far cry from San Francisco to Saranac, yet Stevenson is their
+ connecting chain, with the late Harry Widener's amazing collection of
+ Stevensoniana, in his memorial library at Harvard, as a link. The Saranac
+ cottage, which on the day of my visit was surrounded by the sweetest lilac
+ blooms that ever perfumed the air, is still a place of pilgrimage, and one
+ by one new articles of interest are being added to the collection. It was
+ pleasant indeed to find an English author thus honoured. Later, in Central
+ Park, New York, I was to find statues of Shakespeare, Burns and Sir Walter
+ Scott.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, oddly enough, in the Adirondacks that I came upon my only
+ experience of simplified spelling in the land of its birth. It was in that
+ pleasant home from home, the Lake Placid Club, where one is adjured to
+ close the door "tyt" as one leaves a room; where one drinks "cofi"; and
+ where that most necessary and mysterious of the functionaries of life, the
+ physician, is able to watch his divinity dwindle and his dignity disappear
+ under the style "fizisn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ STORIES AND HUMOURISTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I heard many stories in America, where every one is a raconteur, but none
+ was better than this, which my San Francisco host narrated, from his own
+ experience, as the most perfect example of an honest answer ever given.
+ When a boy, he said, he was much in the company of an old trapper in the
+ Californian mountains. During one of their expeditions together he noticed
+ that a camp meeting was to be held, and out of curiosity he persuaded
+ Reuben to attend it with him. Perched on a back seat, they were watching
+ the scene when an elderly Evangelical sister placed herself beside the old
+ hunter, laid her hand on his arm, and asked him if he loved Jesus. He
+ pondered for some moments and then replied thus: "Waal, ma'am, I can't go
+ so far as to say that I love Him. I can't go so far as that. But, by gosh,
+ I'll say this&mdash;I ain't got nothin' agin Him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The funniest spontaneous thing I heard said was the remark of a farmer in
+ the Adirondacks in reply to my question, Had they recovered up there, from
+ the recent war? "Yes," he said, they had; adding brightly, "Quite a war,
+ wasn't it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a manner of speaking all Americans are humourists. Just as all French
+ people are wits by reason of the epigrammatic structure of their language,
+ so are all Americans humourists by reason of the national stores of
+ picturesque slang and analogy to which they have access. I think that this
+ tendency to resort to a common stock instead of striving after individual
+ exactitude and colour is to be deplored. It discourages thought where
+ thought should be encouraged. Adults are, of course, beyond redemption,
+ but parents might at least do something about it with their children. One
+ of the cleverest American writers whom I met made no effort whatever to
+ get beyond these accepted phrases as he narrated one racy incident after
+ another. With the pen in his hand (or, more probably, the typewriter under
+ his fingers) his sense of epithet is precise; but in his conversational
+ stories men were as mad "as Sam Hill," injuries hurt "like hell," and a
+ knapsack was as heavy "as the devil." We all laughed; but he should have
+ had more of the artist's pride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three American professional humourists whom I had the good fortune to meet
+ and be with for some time were Irvin Cobb, Don Marquis, and Oliver
+ Herford, each authentic and each so different. Beneath Mr. Cobb's fun is a
+ mass of ripe experience and sagacity. However playful he may be on the
+ surface one is aware of an almost Johnsonian universality beneath. It
+ would not be extravagant to call his humour the bloom on the fruit of the
+ tree of knowledge (I am talking now only of the three as I found them in
+ conversation). Don Marquis, while equally serious (and all the best
+ humourists are serious at heart), has a more grotesque fancy and is more
+ of a reformer, or, at any rate, a rebel. His dissatisfaction with
+ hypocrisy provoked a scorn that Mr. Cobb is too elemental to entertain.
+ Some day perhaps Don Marquis will induce an editor to print the exercises
+ in unorthodoxy which he has been writing and which, in extract, he
+ repeated to us with such unction; but I doubt it. They are too searching.
+ But that so busy a man should turn aside from his work to dabble in
+ religious satire seemed to me a very interesting thing; for nothing is so
+ unprofitable&mdash;except to the honest soul of him who conceives it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of Don Marquis's more racy stories which I recollect is of a loafer in
+ a country town who had the habit of dropping into the store every day at
+ the time the free cheese was set on the counter, and buying very little in
+ return. When the time came for the privilege to be withdrawn the loafer
+ was outraged and aghast. Addressing the storekeeper (his friend for years)
+ he summed up his ungenerosity in these terms: "Your soul, Henry," he said,
+ "is so mean, that if there were a million souls like it in the belly of a
+ flea, they'd be so far apart they couldn't hear each other holler."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Oliver Herford, he is an elf, a sprite, a creature of fantasy, who
+ may be&mdash;and, I rejoice to say, is&mdash;in this world, but certainly
+ is not of it. This Oliver is in the line of Puck and Mercutio and Lamb and
+ Hood and other lovers and makers of nonsense, and it is we who ask for
+ "more." He had just brought out his irresponsible but very searching
+ exercise in cosmogony, "This Giddy Globe," dedicated to President Wilson
+ ("with all his faults he quotes me still") and this was the first
+ indigenous work I read on American soil. Oliver Herford is perhaps best
+ known by his "Rubaiyat of a Persian Kitten," and there is a kitten also in
+ "This Giddy Globe":
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Hurray!" cried the Kitten, "Hurray!"
+ As he merrily set the sails,
+ "I sail o'er the ocean to-day
+ To look at the Prince of Wales."
+&mdash;this was when the Prince was making his triumphant visit to New York
+in 1919&mdash;
+
+ "But, Kitten," I said dismayed,
+ "If you live through the angry gales
+ You know you will be afraid
+ To look at the Prince of Wales."
+
+ Said the Kitten, "No such thing!
+ Why should he make me wince?
+ If a Cat may look at a King
+ A Kitten may look at a Prince!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This reminds me that the story goes that when the Prince expressed his
+ admiration for Fifth Avenue he was congratulated upon having "said a
+ mouthful." Beyond a mouthful, as an encomium of sagacity or sensationalism
+ in speech, there is but one advance and that is when one says "an earful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE CARS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The journey from San Francisco to Chicago, once the fruit country is
+ passed, is drearily tedious, and I was never so tired of a train. The
+ spacious compartments that one travelled in on the Indian journeys, where
+ there are four arm-chairs and a bath-room, are a bad preparation for the
+ long narrow American cars packed with humanity, and for the very
+ inadequate washing-room, which is also the negro attendant's bed-chamber:
+ "Although," he explained to me, "when the car isn't full I always sleep in
+ Berth Number 1." If the night could be indefinitely prolonged, these
+ journeys would be more tolerable; but for the general comfort the sleeping
+ berths must be converted into seats at an early hour. In addition to
+ books, I had, as a means of beguilement, the society of a returned exile
+ from the Philippines, who told me the story of his life, showed me the
+ necklace he was taking home to his daughter's wedding, and asked my advice
+ as to the wisdom or unwisdom of marrying again, the lady of his wavering
+ choice having been at school with him in New England and being now a widow
+ in Nebraska with property of her own. Besides being thus garrulous and
+ open, he was the most helpful man I ever met, acting as a nurse to the
+ three or four restless children in the car, and even producing from his
+ bag a pair of scissors and a bottle of gum with which to make dolls' paper
+ clothes. Never in my life have I called a stranger "Ed" on such short
+ acquaintance; never have I been called "Poppa" so often by the peevish
+ progeny of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on this train that I began to realise how much thirstier the
+ Americans are than we. The passengers were continually filling and
+ emptying the little cups that are stacked beside the fountains in the
+ corridors, and long before we reached Chicago the cups had all been used.
+ In England only children drink water at odd times and they not to excess.
+ But in America every one drinks water, and the water is there for
+ drinking, pure and cold and plentiful. It is beside the bed, in the
+ corners of offices, awaiting you at meals, jingling down the passages of
+ hotels, bubbling in the streets. In English restaurants, water bottles are
+ rarely supplied until asked for; in our hotel bedrooms they seldom bear
+ lifting to the light. As to whether the general health of the Americans is
+ superior or inferior to ours by reason of this water-drinking custom, I
+ have no information; but figures would be interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHICAGO
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In Chicago the weather was wet and cold, and it was not until after I had
+ left that I learned of the presence there of certain literary collections
+ which I may now perhaps never see. But I spent much time in the Museum,
+ where there is one of the finest Hobbemas in the world, and where two such
+ different creative artists as Claude Monet and Josiah Wedgwood are
+ especially honoured. But the chief discovery for me was the sincere and
+ masterly work in landscape of George Inness, my first impression of whom
+ was to be fortified when I passed on to Boston, and reinforced in the
+ Hearn collection in the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in Chicago, in the Marshall Field Book Department&mdash;which is to
+ ordinary English bookshops like a liner to a houseboat&mdash;that I first
+ realised how intense is the interest which America takes in foreign
+ contemporary literature. In England the translation has a certain vogue&mdash;Mrs.
+ Garnett's supple and faithful renderings of Turgenev, Tolstoi,
+ Dostoievski, and Tchekov have, for example, a great following&mdash;but we
+ do not adventure much beyond the French and the Russians; whereas I learn
+ that English versions of hundreds of other foreign books are eagerly
+ bought in America. Such curiosity seems to me to be very sensible. I was
+ surprised also to find tables packed high with the modern drama. In
+ England the printed play is not to the general taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in Chicago that I found "window-shopping" at its most enterprising.
+ In San Francisco the costumiers' windows were thronged all Sunday, but in
+ Chicago they are brilliantly lighted till midnight, long after closing
+ hours, so that late passers-by may mark down desirable things to buy on
+ the morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spirited equestrian statue of General John A. Logan, in a waste space
+ by Michigan Avenue, which I could see from my bedroom window, was my first
+ and by no means the least satisfying experience of American sculpture on
+ its native soil&mdash;to be face to face with St. Gaudens' figure of
+ "Grief" in Rock Creek Cemetery, at Washington, having long been a desire.
+ In time I came to see that beautiful conception, and I saw also the fine
+ Shaw monument in Boston, fine both in idea and in execution; and the
+ Sheridan, by the Plaza Hotel in New York; and the Farragut in Madison
+ Square; and the Pilgrim in Philadelphia&mdash;all the work of the same
+ firm, sensitive hand, a replica of whose Lincoln is now to be seen at
+ Westminster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The statue seems almost as natural a part of civic ornament in America as
+ it is in France, and is not in England; and the standard as a rule is
+ high. In particular I like the many horsemen&mdash;Anthony Wayne
+ dominating the landscape at Valley Forge; and George Washington again and
+ again, and not least in Fairmount Park in Philadelphia (where there is
+ also a bronze roughrider realistically set on a cliff&mdash;as though from
+ Ambrose Bierce's famous story&mdash;by Frederic Remington). American
+ painters can too often suggest predecessors, usually French, but the
+ sculptors have a strength and directness of their own, and it would not
+ surprise me if some of the best statues of the future came from their
+ country. No one would say that all American civic sculpture is good. There
+ is a gigantic bust of Washington Irving behind New York's Public Library
+ which would be better away; nor are the lions that guard that splendid
+ institution superabundantly leonine; but the traveller is more charmed
+ than depressed by the marble and bronze effigies that meet his eye&mdash;and
+ few witnesses have been able to say that of England. Among the more
+ remarkable public works I might name the symbolical figures on the steps
+ of the Boston Free Library, and the frieze in deep relief on the
+ Romanesque church on Park Avenue in New York, and I found something big
+ and impressive in the Barnard groups at Harrisburg. Many of the little
+ bronzes in the Metropolitan Museum&mdash;at the other extreme&mdash;are
+ exquisite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE MOVIES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We have our cinema theatres in England in some abundance, but the cinema
+ is not yet in the blood here as in America. In America picture-palaces are
+ palaces indeed&mdash;with gold and marble, and mural decorations, built to
+ seat thousands&mdash;and every newspaper has its cinema page, where the
+ activities of the movie stars in their courses are chronicled every
+ morning. Moreover, America is the home of the industry; and rightly so,
+ for it has, I should say, been abundantly proved that Americans are the
+ only people who really understand both cinema acting and cinema
+ production. Italy, France and England make a few pictures, but their
+ efforts are half-hearted: not only because acting for the film is a new
+ and separate art, but because atmospheric conditions are better in America
+ than in Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in Chicago that I had my only opportunity of seeing cinema stars in
+ the flesh. The rain falling, as it seems to do there with no more effort or
+ fatigue to itself than in Manchester, I had, one afternoon, to change my
+ outdoor plans and take refuge at the matinee of a musical comedy called
+ "Sometime," with Frank Tinney in the leading part. Tinney, I may say,
+ during his engagement in London some years ago, became so great a
+ favourite that one performer has been flourishing on an imitation of him
+ ever since. The play had been in progress only for a few minutes when
+ Frank, in his capacity as a theatre doorkeeper, was presented by his
+ manager with a tip. A dialogue, which to the trained ear was obviously
+ more or less an improvisation, then followed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Manager</i>: "What will you do with that dollar, Frank?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Frank</i>: "I shall go to the movies. I always go to the movies when
+ there's a Norma Talmadge picture. Ask me why I always go to the movies
+ when there's a Norma Talmadge picture."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Manager</i>: "Why do you always go to the movies when there's a Norma
+ Talmadge picture, Frank?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Frank</i>: "I go because, I go because she's my favourite actress. (<i>Applause</i>.)
+ Ask me why Norma Talmadge is my favourite actress."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Manager</i>: "Why is Norma Talmadge your favourite actress, Frank?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Frank</i>: "Norma Talmadge is my favourite actress because she is
+ always saving her honour. I've seen her saving it seventeen times. (<i>To
+ the audience</i>) You like Norma Talmadge, don't you?" (<i>Applause from
+ the audience</i>.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Frank</i>: "Then wouldn't you like to see her as she really is? (<i>To
+ a lady sitting with friends in a box</i>.) Stand up, Norma, and let the
+ audience see you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Here a slim lady with a tense, eager, pale face and a mass of hair
+ stood up and bowed. Immense enthusiasm</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Frank</i>: "That's Norma Talmadge. You do like saving your honour,
+ don't you, Norma? And now (<i>to the audience</i>) wouldn't you like to
+ see Norma's little sister, Constance? (<i>More applause</i>.) Stand up,
+ Constance, and let the audience see you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here another slim lady bowed her acknowledgments and the play was
+ permitted to proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What America is going to do with the cinema remains to be seen, but I, for
+ one, deplore the modern tendency of novelists to be lured by American
+ money to write for it. If the cinema wants stories from novelists let it
+ take them from the printed books. One has but to reflect upon what might
+ have happened had the cinema been invented a hundred years ago, to realise
+ my disturbance of mind. With Mr. Lasky's millions to tempt them Dickens
+ would have written "David Copperfield" and Thackeray "Vanity Fair," not
+ for their publishers and as an endowment to millions of grateful readers
+ in perpetuity, but as plots for the immediate necessity of the film, with
+ a transitory life of a few months in dark rooms. Of what new "David
+ Copperfields" and "Vanity Fairs" the cinema is to rob us we shall not
+ know; but I hold that the novelist who can write a living book is a
+ traitor to his art and conscience if he prefers the easy money of the
+ film. Readers are to be considered before the frequenters of Picture
+ Palaces. His privilege is to beguile and amuse and refresh through the
+ ages: not to snatch momentary triumphs and disappear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evidence of the moment is more on the side of the pessimist than the
+ optimist. I found in America no trace of interest in such valuable records
+ as the Kearton pictures of African jungle life or the Ponting records of
+ the Arctic Zone. For the moment the whole energy of the gigantic cinema
+ industry seemed to be directed towards the filming of human stories and
+ the completest beguilement, without the faintest infusion of instruction
+ or idealism, of the many-headed mob. In short, to provide "dope." Whether
+ so much "dope" is desirable, is the question to be answered. That poor
+ human nature needs a certain amount, is beyond doubt. But so much? And do
+ we all need it, or at any rate deserve it? is another question. Sometimes
+ indeed I wonder whether those of us who have our full share of senses
+ ought to go to the cinema at all. It may be that its true purpose is to be
+ the dramatist of the deaf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE AMERICAN FACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps it is one of the travellers' illusions (and we are very
+ susceptible to them), but I have the impression that American men are more
+ alike than the English are. It may be because there are fewer
+ idiosyncrasies in male attire, for in America every one wears the same
+ kind of hat; but I think not. In spite of the mixed origin of most
+ Americans, a national type of face has been evolved to which they seem
+ satisfied almost universally to pay allegiance. Again and again in the
+ streets I have been about to accost strangers to whom I felt sure I had
+ recently been introduced, discovering just in time that they were merely
+ doubles. In England I fancy there is more individuality in appearance. If
+ it is denied that American faces are more true to one type than ours, I
+ shall reopen the attack by affirming that American voices are beyond
+ question alike. My position in these two charges may be illustrated by
+ notices that I saw fixed to gates at the docks in San Francisco. On one
+ were the words "No Smoking"; on the other "Positively No Smoking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what about the science of physiognomy? I have been wondering if
+ Lavater is to be trusted outside Europe. In China and Japan I was
+ continually perplexed, for I saw so many men who obviously were successful&mdash;leaders
+ and controllers&mdash;but who were without more than the rudiments of a
+ nose on which to support their glasses; and yet I have been brought up to
+ believe that without a nose of some dimensions it was idle to hope for
+ worldly eminence. Again, in America, is it possible that all these massive
+ chins and firm aquiline beaks are ruling the roost and reaching whatever
+ goal they set out for? I doubt it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average American face is, I think, keener than ours and healthier. One
+ sees fewer ruined faces than in English cities, fewer men and women who
+ have lost self-respect and self-control. The American people as a whole
+ strike the observer as being more prosperous, more alert and ambitious,
+ than the English. Where I found mean streets they were always in the
+ occupation of aliens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To revert to the matter of clothes, the American does as little as
+ possible to make things easy for the conjectural observer. In England one
+ can base guesses of some accuracy on attire. In a railway carriage one can
+ hazard without any great risk of error the theory that this man is in
+ trade and that in a profession, that another is a stockbroker, and a
+ fourth a country squire. But America is full of surprises, due to the
+ uniformity of clothing and a certain carelessness which elevates comfort
+ to a ritual. The man you think of as a millionaire may be a drummer, the
+ drummer a millionaire. Again, in England people are known to a certain
+ extent by the hotels they stay at, the restaurants they eat at, and the
+ class in which they travel. Such superficial guides fail one in America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PROHIBITION AGAIN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I can best indicate, without the mechanical assistance of dates, the time
+ of my sojourn in New York by saying that, during those few weeks, Woodrow
+ Wilson's successor was being sought, the possibility of the repeal of the
+ Prohibition Act was a matter of excited interest, and "Babe" Ruth was the
+ national hero. During this period I saw the President sitting on the
+ veranda of the White House; I had opportunities of honouring Prohibition
+ in the breach as well as in the observance; and these eyes were
+ everlastingly cheered and enriched by the spectacle of the "Babe" (who is
+ a baseball divinity) lifting a ball over the Polo Ground pavilion into
+ Manhattan Field. I hold, then, that I cannot be said to have been unlucky
+ or to have wasted my time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I found (this was in the spring of 1920) Prohibition the universal topic:
+ could it last, and should it last? In England we are accused of talking
+ always of the weather. In America, where there is no weather, nothing but
+ climate, that theme probably was never popular. Even if it once were,
+ however, it had given way to Prohibition. At every lunch or dinner table
+ at which I was present Prohibition was a topic. And how could it be
+ otherwise?&mdash;for if my host was a "dry" man, he had to begin by
+ apologising for having nothing cheering to offer, and if he possessed a
+ cellar it was impossible not to open the ball by congratulating him on his
+ luck and his generosity. Meanwhile the guests were comparing notes as to
+ the best substitutes for alcoholic beverages, exchanging recipes, or
+ describing their adventures with private stills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I visited a young couple in a charming little cottage in one of the garden
+ cities near New York, and found them equally divided in their solicitude
+ over a baby on the top floor and a huge jar in the basement which needed
+ constant skimming if the beer was to be worth drinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One effect of Prohibition which I was hoping for, if not actually
+ expecting, failed to materialise. I had thought that the standard of what
+ are called T.B.M. (Tired Business Men) theatrical shows might be higher if
+ the tendency of alcohol to make audiences more tolerant (as it undoubtedly
+ can do in London) were no longer operative. But these entertainments
+ seemed, under teetotallers, no better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE BALL GAME
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After seeing my first ball game or so I was inclined to suggest
+ improvements; but now that I have attended more I am disposed to think
+ that those in authority know more about it than I do, and that such
+ blemishes as it appears to have are probably inevitable. For one thing, I
+ thought that the outfield had too great an advantage. For another, not
+ unassociated with that objection, I thought that the home-run hit was not
+ sufficiently rewarded above the quite ordinary hit&mdash;"bunch-hit," is
+ it?&mdash;that brings in a man or men. In the English game of "Rounders,"
+ the parent of baseball, a home-run hit either restores life to a man
+ already out or provides the batting side with a life in reserve. To put a
+ premium of this kind on so noble an achievement is surely not fantastic.
+ So I thought. And yet I see now that the game must not be lengthened, or
+ much of its character would go. It is its concentrated American fury that
+ is its greatest charm. If a three-day cricket match were so packed with
+ emotion we should all die of heart failure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought, too, that it is illogical that a ground stroke behind the
+ diamond should be a no-ball, and yet, should that ball be in the air and
+ caught, the striker should be out. I thought it an odd example of lenience
+ to allow the batsman as many strokes behind the catcher as he chanced to
+ make. But the more baseball I see the more it enchants me as a spectacle,
+ and these early questionings are forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baseball and cricket cannot be compared, because they are as different as
+ America and England; they can only be contrasted. Indeed, many of the
+ differences between the peoples are reflected in the games; for cricket is
+ leisurely and patient, whereas baseball is urgent and restless. Cricket
+ can prosper without excitement, while excitement is baseball's life-blood,
+ and so on: the catalogue could be indefinitely extended. But, though a
+ comparison is futile, it may be interesting to note some of the
+ divergences between the games. One of the chief is that baseball requires
+ no specially prepared ground, whereas cricket demands turf in perfect
+ order. Bad weather, again, is a more serious foe to the English than to
+ the American game, for if the turf is soaked we cannot go on, and hence
+ the number of drawn or unfinished matches in the course of a season. A two
+ hours' game, such as baseball is, can, however, always be played off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In baseball the pitcher's ball must reach the batter before it touches the
+ ground; in cricket, if the ball did not touch the ground first and reach
+ the batsman on the bound, no one would ever be out at all, for the other
+ ball, the full-pitch as we call it, is, with a flat bat, too easy to hit,
+ for our bowlers swerve very rarely: it is the contact with the ground
+ which enables them to give the ball its extra spin or break. Full-pitches
+ are therefore very uncommon. In cricket a bowler who delivered the ball
+ with the action of a pitcher would be disqualified for "throwing": it is
+ one of the laws of cricket that the bowler's elbow must not be bent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In cricket (I mean in the first-class variety of the game) the decisions
+ of the umpire are never questioned, either by players or public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In baseball there are but two strokes for the batter: either the "swipe,"
+ or "slog," as we call it, where he uses all his might, or the "bunt,"
+ usually a sacrificial effort; in cricket there are scores of strokes,
+ before the wicket, behind it, and at every angle to it. These the
+ cricketer is able to make because the bat is flat and wide, and he holds
+ it both vertically and at a slant, as occasion demands, and is allowed, at
+ his own risk, to run out to meet the ball. In the early days of cricket, a
+ hundred and fifty years ago, the bat was like a baseball club, but curved,
+ and the only strokes then were much what the only baseball strokes are now&mdash;the
+ full-strength hit and the stopping hit. So long as the pitcher delivers
+ the ball in the air it is probable that the baseball club will remain as
+ it is; but should the evolution of the game allow the pitcher to make use
+ of the ground, then the introduction of a flattened club is probable. But
+ let us not look ahead. All that we can be sure of is that, since baseball
+ is American, it will change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To resume the catalogue of contrast. In baseball the batsman must run for
+ every fair hit; in cricket he may choose which hits to run for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In baseball a man's desire is to hit the ball in the air beyond the
+ fielders; in cricket, though a man would like to do this, his side is
+ better served if he hits every ball along the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In baseball no man can have more than a very small number of hits in a
+ match; in cricket he can be batting for a whole day, and then again before
+ the match is over. There are instances of batsmen making over 400 runs
+ before being out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another difference between the games is that in cricket we use a new ball
+ only at the beginning of a fresh inning (of which there cannot be more
+ than four in a match) and when each 200 runs have been scored; and (this
+ will astonish the American reader) when the ball is hit among the people
+ it is returned. I have seen such rapid voluntary surrenders at baseball
+ very seldom, and so much of a "fan" have I become that the spectacle has
+ always been accompanied in my breast by pain and contempt. I had the
+ gratification of receiving from the burly John McGraw an autograph ball as
+ a souvenir of a visit to the Polo Ground. I put it in my pocket hurriedly,
+ conscious of the risk I ran among a nation of ball-stealers in possessing
+ such a trophy; and I got away with it. But I am sure that had it been a
+ ball hit out of the ground by the mighty "Babe" Ruth, which&mdash;recovering
+ it by some supernatural means&mdash;he had handed to me in public, I
+ should not have emerged alive, or, if alive, not in the ball's company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In cricket the wicket-keeper, who, like the baseball catcher, is
+ protected, although he has no mask, is the most difficult man to obtain,
+ because he has the hardest time and the least public approbation; in
+ baseball the catcher is a hero and every boy aspires to his mitt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In cricket no player makes more than three hundred pounds a season, unless
+ it is his turn for his one and only benefit, when he may make a thousand
+ pounds more. But most players do not reach such a level of success that a
+ benefit is their lot. But baseballers earn enormous sums.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If a match could be arranged between eleven cricketers and eleven
+ baseballers, the cricketers to be allowed to bowl and the baseballers to
+ pitch, the cricketers to use their own bats and the baseballers their own
+ clubs, I fancy that the cricketers would win; for the difficulty of
+ hitting our bowling with a club would be greater than of hitting their
+ pitching with a bat. But their wonderful fielding and far more accurate
+ and swifter throwing than ours might just save them. Such throwing we see
+ only very rarely, for good throwing is no longer insisted upon in cricket,
+ much to the game's detriment. That old players should lose their shoulders
+ is natural&mdash;and, of course, our players remain in first-class cricket
+ for many years longer than ball champions&mdash;but there is no excuse for
+ the young men who have taken advantage of a growing laxity in this matter.
+ Chief of the few cricketers who throw with any of the terrible precision
+ of a baseball field is Hobbs. It must be borne in mind, however, that
+ cricket does not demand such constant throwing at full speed as baseball
+ does; for in cricket, as I have said, the batsman may choose what hits he
+ will run for, and if he chooses only the perfectly safe ones the fieldsmen
+ are never at high pressure. There is also nothing in cricket quite to
+ compare with base-stealing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it comes to catching, the percentage of missed catches is far higher
+ at cricket than at baseball; but there are good reasons for this. One is
+ that in baseball a glove is worn; another that in baseball all catches
+ come to the fieldsmen with long or sufficient notice. The fieldsmen are
+ all, except the catcher, in front of the batsmen; there is nothing to
+ compare with the unexpected nimbleness that our point and slips have to
+ display.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the hypothetical contest that I have suggested, between baseballers and
+ cricketers, if the conditions were nominally equal and the cricketers had
+ to pitch like baseballers and the baseballers to use the English bat, why
+ then the baseballers would win handsomely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baseball, I fancy, will not be acclimatised in England. We had our chance
+ when London was full of American soldiers and we did not take it. But we
+ were very grateful to them for playing the game in our midst, for the
+ authorities were so considerate as to let them play on Sundays (which we
+ are never allowed to do) and I was one of those who hoped that this might
+ be the thin end of the wedge and Sunday cricket also be permitted. But no;
+ when the war was over and the Americans left us, the old Sabbatarianism
+ reasserted itself. If, however, we ever exchanged national games, and
+ cricket were played in America and baseball in England, it is the English
+ spectator who would have the better of the exchange. I am convinced that
+ although we should quickly find baseball diverting, nothing would ever
+ persuade an American crowd to be otherwise than bored by cricket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SKYSCRAPERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps if I had reached New York from the sea the skyscrapers would have
+ struck me more violently. But I had already seen a few in San Francisco
+ (and wondered at and admired the courage which could build so high after
+ the earthquake of 1906), and more in Chicago, all ugly; so that when I
+ came to New York and found that the latest architects were not only
+ building high, but imposing beauty on these mammoth structures, surprise
+ was mingled with delight. No matter how many more millions of dollars are
+ expended on that strange medley of ancient forms which go to make up New
+ York's new Cathedral, where Romanesque and Gothic seem already to be ready
+ for their divorce, the Woolworth Building will be New York's true fane.
+ Mr. Cass Gilbert, the designer of that graceful immensity, not only gave
+ commerce its most notable monument (to date), but removed for ever the
+ slur upon skyscrapers. The Woolworth Building does not scrape the sky; it
+ greets it, salutes it with a <i>beau geste</i>. And I would say something
+ similar of the Bush Building, with its alabaster chapel in the air which
+ becomes translucent at night; and the Madison Square Tower (whose clock
+ face, I noticed, has the amazing diameter of three storeys); and the
+ Burroughs Welcome Building on 41st Street, with its lovely perpendicular
+ lines; and that immense cube of masonry on Park Avenue which bursts into
+ flower, so to speak, at the top in the shape of a very beautiful loggia.
+ But even if these adornments become, as I hope, the rule, one could not
+ resent the ordinary structural elephantiasis a moment after realising New
+ York's physical conditions. A growing city built on a narrow peninsula is
+ unable to expand laterally and must, therefore, soar. The problem was how
+ to make it soar with dignity, and the problem has been solved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the old days when brown stone was the only builders' medium New York
+ must have been a drab city indeed; or so I gather from the few ancient
+ typical residences that remain. There are a few that are new, too, but for
+ the most part the modern house is of white stone. Gayest of all is, I
+ suppose, that vermilion-roofed florist's on Fifth Avenue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One has to ascend the Woolworth Building to appreciate at a blow with what
+ discretion the original settlers of New York made their choice. It is
+ interesting, too, to watch Broadway&mdash;which, for all I know, is the
+ longest street in the world&mdash;starting at one's feet on its lawless
+ journey to Albany: lawless because it is almost the only sinuous thing in
+ this city of parallelograms and has the effrontery to cross diagonally
+ both Fifth Avenue and Sixth. Before leaving the Woolworth Building, I
+ would say that there seemed to me something rather comically paradoxical
+ in being charged 50 cents for access to the top of a structure which was
+ erected to celebrate the triumph of a commercial genius whose boast it was
+ to have made his fortune out of articles sold at a rate never higher than
+ 10 cents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having dallied sufficiently on the summit&mdash;there are a trifle of
+ fifty-eight floors, but an express lift makes nothing of them&mdash;I
+ continued the implacable career of the tripper by watching for a while the
+ deafening kerb market, which presented on that morning an odd appearance,
+ more like Yarmouth beach than a financial centre, for there had been rain,
+ and all the street operators were in sou'westers and sea-boots. There can
+ be spasms of similar excitement in London, in the neighbourhood of Capel
+ Court, but we have nothing that compares so closely with this crowd as
+ Tattersall's Ring at Epsom just before the Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A PLEA FOR THE AQUARIUM
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was a relief to resume my programme by entering that abode of the dumb
+ and detached&mdash;the aquarium in Battery Park. For the kerb uproar "the
+ uncommunicating muteness of fishes" was the only panacea. The Bronx Zoo is
+ not, I think, except in the matter of buffalo and deer paddocks, so good
+ as ours in London, but it has this shining advantage&mdash;it is free. So
+ also is the Aquarium in Battery Park, and it was pleasing to see how
+ crowded the place can be. In England all interest in living fish, except
+ as creatures to be coaxed towards hooks and occasionally retained there,
+ has vanished; on the site of old Westminster Aquarium the Wesleyans now
+ manage their finances and determine their circuits, while the Brighton
+ Aquarium, once famous all the world over, is a variety hall with barely a
+ fin to its name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After seeing the aquarium in Honolulu, which is like a pelagic rainbow
+ factory, and the aquarium in New York with all its strange and beautiful
+ denizens, I am a little ashamed of our English apathy. To maintain picture
+ galleries, where, however beautiful and chromatic, all is dead, and be
+ insensitive to the loveliness of fish, in hue, in shape and in movement,
+ is not quite pardonable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ENGLISH AND FRENCH INFLUENCES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In essentials America is American, but when it comes to inessentials, to
+ trimmings, her dependence on old England was noticeable again and again as
+ I walked about New York. The fashion which, at the moment, the print shops
+ were fostering was for our racing, hunting and coaching coloured prints of
+ a century ago, while in the gallery of the distinguished little Grolier
+ Club I found an exhibition of the work of Randolph Caldecott and Kate
+ Greenaway. In such old bookshops as I visited all the emphasis was&mdash;just
+ then&mdash;laid upon Keats and Lamb and Shelley, whose first editions and
+ presentation copies seem to be continually making the westward journey. I
+ had not been in New York twenty-four hours before Keats' "Lamia," 1820&mdash;with
+ an inscription from the author to Charles Lamb&mdash;the very copy from
+ which, I imagine, Lamb wrote his review, was in my hands; but it would
+ have been far beyond my means even if the pound were not standing at 3.83.
+ These "association" books, in which American collectors take especial
+ pleasure, can be very costly. At a sale soon after I left New York, seven
+ presentation copies of Dickens' books, containing merely the author's
+ signed inscription, realised 4870 dollars. To continue, in Wanamaker's old
+ curiosity department I found little but English furniture and odds and
+ ends, at prices which in their own country would have been fantastically
+ high. In the "Vanity Fair" department, however (as I think it is called),
+ the source was French. I suppose that French influence must be at the back
+ of all the costumiers and jewellers of New York, but the shops themselves
+ are far more spacious than those in Paris and not less well-appointed.
+ Tiffany's is a palace; all it lacks is a name, but its splendid anonymity
+ is, I take it, a point of honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It used to be said that good Americans when they died went to Paris. The
+ Parisian lure no doubt is still powerful; but every day I should guess
+ that more of Paris comes to America. The upper parts of New York have
+ boulevards and apartment houses very like the real thing, and I noticed
+ that the architecture of France exerts a special attraction for the rich
+ man decreeing himself a pleasure dome. There are millionaires' residences
+ in New York that might have been transplanted not only from the Avenue du
+ Bois de Boulogne, but from Touraine itself; while when I made my
+ pilgrimage to Mr. Widener's, just outside Philadelphia, I found
+ Rembrandt's "Mill," and Manet's dead bull-fighter, and a Vermeer, and a
+ little meadow painted divinely by Corot, and El Greco's family group, and
+ Donatello's St. George, and one of the most lovely scenes that ever was
+ created by Turner's enchanted brush, all enshrined in a palace which Louis
+ Seize might have built.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But America is even more French than this. Her women can be not less <i>soignées</i>
+ than those of France, although they suggest a cooler blood and less
+ dependence on male society; her bread and coffee are better than France's
+ best. Moreover, when it comes to night and the Broadway constellations
+ challenge the darkness, New York leaves Paris far behind. For every
+ cabaret and supper resort that Paris can provide, New York has three; and
+ for every dancing floor in Paris, New York has thirty. Good Americans,
+ however, will still remain faithful to their old posthumous love, if only
+ for her wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apropos of American women, their position struck me as very different from
+ the position of women with us. English women are deferential to their
+ husbands; they are content to be relegated to the background on all
+ occasions when they are not wanted. They are dependent. They seldom wear
+ an air of triumph and rarely take the lead. But American women are
+ complacent and assured, they do most of the talking, make most of the
+ plans: if they are not seen, it is because they are in the background;
+ they are either active prominently elsewhere or are high on pedestals.
+ With each other they are mostly or often humorously direct, whereas with
+ men they seem to adopt an ironical or patronising attitude. American women
+ seem also to have a curious power of attracting to themselves other women
+ who admire them and foster their self-esteem. And, for all that I know,
+ these satellites have satellites too. Their federacy almost amounts to a
+ solid secret society; not so much against men, for men must provide the
+ sinews of war and other comforts, but for their own satisfaction. Both
+ sexes appear not to languish when alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SKY-SIGNS AND CONEY ISLAND
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All visitors to New York speak of the exhilaration of its air, and I can
+ but repeat their testimony. After the first few days the idea of going to
+ bed became an absurdity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the peculiarly beautiful effects that America produces, sky signs
+ must be counted high. I had seen some when in San Francisco against the
+ deep Californian night, and they captivated the startled vision; but the
+ reckless profusion and movement of the Great White Way, as I turned out of
+ 42nd Street on my first evening in New York, came as something more than a
+ surprise: a revelation of wilful gaiety. We have normally nothing in
+ England to compare with it. Nor can we have even our Earl's Court
+ exhibition imitations of it so long as coal is so rare and costly. But
+ though we had the driving power for the electricity we could never get
+ such brilliance, for the clear American atmosphere is an essential ally.
+ In our humid airs all the diamond glints would be blurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the purest beauty of traceries of light against a blue background one
+ must go, however, not to Broadway, which is too bizarre, but to Luna Park
+ on Coney Island. Odd that it should be there, in that bewildering medley
+ of sound and restlessness, that an extreme of loveliness should be found;
+ but I maintain that it is so, that nothing more strangely and voluptuously
+ beautiful could be seen than all those minarets and domes, with their
+ lines and curves formed by myriad lamps, turning by contrast the heavens
+ into an ocean of velvet blue, mysterious and soft and profound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only periodically&mdash;when we have exhibitions at Earl's Court or at
+ Olympia&mdash;is there in England anything like Coney Island. At Blackpool
+ in August, and on Hampstead Heath on Bank Holidays, a corresponding spirit
+ of revelry is attempted, but it is not so natural, and is vitiated by a
+ self-conscious determination to be gay and by not a little vulgarity. The
+ revellers of Steeplechase Park seemed to me to be more genuine even than
+ the crowds that throng the Fęte de Neuilly; and a vast deal happier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One very striking difference between Coney Island and the French fair is
+ the absence of children from New York's "safety-valve," as some one
+ described it to me. I saw hardly any. It is as though once again the
+ child's birthday gifts had been appropriated by its elders; but as a
+ matter of fact the Parks of Steeplechase and Luna were, I imagine,
+ designed deliberately for adults. Judging by the popularity of the chutes
+ and the whips, the switchbacks and the witching waves, eccentric movement
+ has a peculiar attraction for the American holiday-maker. As some one put
+ it, there is no better way, or at any rate no more thorough way, of
+ throwing young people together. Middle-aged people, too. But the observer
+ receives no impression of moral disorder. High spirits are the rule, and
+ impropriety is the exception. Even in the auditorium at Steeplechase Park,
+ where the <i>cognoscenti</i> assemble to witness the discomfiture of the
+ uninitiated, there is nothing but harmless laughter as the skirts fly up
+ before the unsuspected blast. Such a performance in England, were it
+ permitted, would degenerate into ugliness; in France, too, it would make
+ the alien spectator uncomfortable. But the essential public chastity of
+ the Americans&mdash;I am not sure that I ought not here to write
+ civilisation of the Americans&mdash;emerges triumphant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at Coney Island that I came suddenly upon the Pig Slide and had a
+ new conception of what quadrupeds can do for man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pig Slide, which was in one of the less noisy quarters of Luna Park,
+ consisted of an enclosure in which stood a wooden building of two storeys,
+ some five yards wide and three high. On the upper storey was a row of six
+ or eight cages, in each of which dwelt a little live pig, an infant of a
+ few weeks. In the middle of the row, descending to the ground, was an
+ inclined board, with raised edges, such as is often installed in
+ swimming-baths to make diving automatic, and beneath each cage was a hole
+ a foot in diameter. The spectators and participants crowded outside the
+ enclosure, and the thing was to throw balls, which were hired for the
+ purpose, into the holes. Nothing could exceed the alert and eager interest
+ taken by the little pigs in the efforts of the ball-throwers. They
+ quivered on their little legs; they pressed their little noses against the
+ bars of the cages; their little eyes sparkled; their tails (the only
+ public corkscrews left in America) curled and uncurled and curled again:
+ and with reason, for whereas if you missed&mdash;as was only too easy&mdash;nothing
+ happened: if you threw accurately the fun began, and the fun was also
+ theirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is what occurred. First a bell rang and then a spring released the
+ door of the cage immediately over the hole which your ball had entered, so
+ that it swung open. The little pig within, after watching the previous
+ infirmity of your aim with dejection, if not contempt, had pricked up his
+ ears on the sound of the bell, and now smiled a gratified smile,
+ irresistible in infectiousness, and trotted out, and, with the smile
+ dissolving into an expression of absolute beatitude, slid voluptuously
+ down the plank: to be gathered in at the foot by an attendant and returned
+ to its cage all ready for another such adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was for these moments and their concomitant changes of countenance that
+ you paid your money. To taste the triumph of good marksmanship was only a
+ fraction of your joy; the greater part of it consisted in liberating a
+ little prisoner and setting in motion so much ecstasy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PRESS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ America is a land of newspapers, and the newspapers are very largely the
+ same. To a certain extent many of them are exactly the same, for the
+ vastness of the country makes it possible to syndicalise various features,
+ so that you find Walt Mason's sagacious and merry and punctual verse,
+ printed to look like prose but never disappointing the ear, in one of the
+ journals that you buy wherever you are, in San Francisco, Salt Lake City,
+ Chicago or New York; and Mr. Montagu's topical rhymes in another; and the
+ daily adventures of Mutt and Jeff, who are national heroes, in a third.
+ Every day, for ever, do those and other regular features occur in certain
+ of the papers: which is partly why no American ever seems to confine
+ himself, as is our custom, to only one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another and admirable feature of certain American papers is a column
+ edited by a man of letters, whose business it is to fill it every day,
+ either with the blossoms of his own intelligence or of outside
+ contributors, or a little of each: such a column as Don Marquis edits for
+ <i>The Sun</i>, called "The Sundial," and Franklin R. Adams for <i>The
+ Tribune</i>, called "The Conning Tower," and Christopher Morley for the
+ New York <i>Evening Post</i>, called "The Bowling Green." Perhaps the
+ unsigned "Way of the World" in our <i>Morning Post</i> is the nearest
+ London correlative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These columns are managed with skill and catholicity, and they impart an
+ element of graciousness and fancy into what might otherwise be too
+ materialistic a budget. A journalist, like myself, is naturally delighted
+ to find editors and a vast public so true to their writing friends. Very
+ few English editors allow their subscribers the opportunity of
+ establishing such steady personal relations; and in England, in
+ consequence, the signed daily contribution from one literary hand is very
+ rare&mdash;to an American observer probably mysteriously so. The daily
+ cartoon is common with us; but in London, for example, I cannot think of
+ any similar literary feature that is signed in full. We have C.E.B.'s
+ regular verse in the <i>Evening News</i> and "The Londoner's" daily essay
+ in the same paper, and various initials elsewhere; but, with us, only the
+ artists are allowed their names. Now, in America every name, everywhere,
+ is blazoned forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever bushel measures may be used for in the United States the
+ concealing of light is no part of their programme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another feature of American daily journals comparatively unknown in
+ England is the so-called comic pictorial sequence. All the big papers have
+ from one to half a dozen of these sequences, each by a different artist.
+ Bud Fisher with "Mutt and Jeff" comes first in popularity, I believe, and
+ then there are his rivals and his imitators. Nothing more inane than some
+ of these series could be invented; and yet they persist and could not, I
+ am told, be dropped by any editor who thought first of circulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the individual contributions have been subtracted, all the
+ newspapers are curiously alike. The same reporters might be on every one;
+ the same sub-editors; the same composers of head-lines. If we think of
+ Americans as too capable of cynical levity it is largely because of these
+ head-lines, which are always as epigrammatic as possible, always
+ light-hearted, often facetious, and often cruel. An unfortunate woman's
+ failure at suicide after killing her husband was thus touched off in one
+ of the journals while I was in New York:
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ POOR SHOT AT HERSELF BUT SUCCEEDS IN LODGING BULLET IN SPOUSE.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When it comes to the choice of news, one cannot believe that American
+ editors are the best friends of their country. I am holding no brief for
+ many English editors; I think that our papers can be common too, and can
+ be too ready to take things by the wrong handle; but I think that more
+ vulgarising of life is, at present, effected by American journalists than
+ by English. There are, however, many signs that we may catch up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Profusion is a characteristic of the American newspaper. There is too much
+ of everything. And when Sunday comes with its masses of reading matter
+ proper to the Day of Rest one is appalled. One thing is certain&mdash;no
+ American can find time to do justice both to his Sunday paper and his
+ Maker. It is principally on Sunday that one realises that if Matthew
+ Arnold's saying that every nation has the newspapers it deserves is true,
+ America must have been very naughty. How the Sunday editions could be
+ brought out while the paper-shortage was being discussed everywhere, as it
+ was during my visit, was a problem that staggered me. But that the
+ shortage was real I was assured, and jokes upon it even got into the music
+ halls: a sure indication of its existence. "If the scarcity of paper gets
+ more acute," I heard a comedian say, "they'll soon have to make shoes of
+ leather again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is not only the Sunday papers that are so immense. I used to hold
+ the <i>Saturday Evening Post</i> in my hands, weighed down beneath its
+ bulk, and marvel that the nation that had time to read it could have time
+ for anything else. The matter is of the best, but what would the prudent,
+ wise and hard-working philosopher who founded it so many years ago&mdash;Benjamin
+ Franklin&mdash;say if he saw its lure deflecting millions of readers from
+ the real business of life?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we come to consider the American magazines&mdash;to which class the
+ <i>Saturday Evening Post</i> almost belongs&mdash;and the English, there
+ is no comparison. The best American magazines are wonderful in their
+ quality and range, and we have nothing to set beside them. It is
+ astonishing to think how different, in the same country, daily and monthly
+ journalism can be. Omitting the monthly reviews, <i>Blackwood</i> is, I
+ take it, our finest monthly miscellany; and all of <i>Blackwood</i> could
+ easily and naturally be absorbed in one of the American magazines and be
+ illustrated into the bargain, and still leave room for much more. And the
+ whole would cost less! Why England is so poorly and pettily served in the
+ matter of monthly magazines is something of a mystery; but part of the
+ cause is the rivalry of the papers, and part the smallness of our
+ population. But I shall always hold that we deserve more good magazines
+ than we have now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ TREASURES OF ART
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I was fortunate in being in New York when the Metropolitan Museum
+ celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of its birth, for I was therefore able
+ to enjoy not only its normal treasures but such others as had been
+ borrowed for birthday presents, which means that I saw Mrs. H. E.
+ Huntington's Vermeer, as well as the supreme Marquand example of that
+ master; more than the regular wealth of Rembrandts, Manet's "Still Life,"
+ Gauguin's "Women by the River," El Greco's "View of Toledo," Franz Hals'
+ big jovial Dutchman from Mr. Harry Goldman's walls, and Bellini's
+ "Bacchanale"&mdash;to say nothing of the lace in galleries 18 and 19, Mr.
+ Morgan's bronze Eros from Pompeii, and the various cases of porcelain from
+ a score of collections. But without extra allurements I should have been
+ drawn again and again to this magnificent museum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two of the principal metropolitan donors&mdash;Altman and Hearn&mdash;were
+ the owners of big dry goods stores, while Marquand, whose little Vermeer
+ is probably the loveliest thing in America, was also a merchant. In future
+ I shall look upon all the great emporium proprietors as worthy of
+ patronage, on the chance of their being also beneficent collectors of
+ works of art. This thought, this hope, is more likely to get me into a
+ certain Oxford Street establishment than all the rhetoric and special
+ pleading of Callisthenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Frick Gallery was not accessible; but I was privileged to roam at will
+ both in Mr. Morgan's library and in Mr. H. E. Huntington's, in each of
+ which I saw such a profusion of unique and unappraisable autographs as I
+ had not supposed existed in private hands. Rare books any one with money
+ can have, for they are mostly in duplicate; but autographs and
+ "association" books are unique, and America is the place for them. I had
+ known that it was necessary to cross the Atlantic in order to see the
+ originals of many of the pictures of which we in London have only the
+ photographs. I knew that the bulk of the Lamb correspondence was in
+ America, and at Mr. Morgan's I saw the author's draft of the essay on
+ "Roast Pig," and at Mr. Newton's, in Philadelphia, the original of "Dream
+ Children," an even more desirable possession; I knew that America had
+ provided an eager home for everything connected with Keats and Shelley and
+ Stevenson; but it was a surprise to find at Mr. Morgan's so wide a range
+ of MSS., extending from Milton to Du Maurier, and from Bacon to "Dorian
+ Gray"; while at Mr. Huntington's I had in my hands the actual foolscap
+ sheets on which Heine composed his "Florentine Nights."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I ought, you say, to have known this before. Maybe. But that ignorance in
+ such matters is no monopoly of mine I can prove by remarking that many an
+ American collector with whom I have talked was unaware that the library of
+ Harvard University is the possessor of all the works of reference&mdash;mostly
+ annotated&mdash;which were used by Thomas Carlyle in writing his
+ "Cromwell" and his "Frederick the Great," and they were bequeathed by him
+ in his will to Harvard University because of his esteem and regard for the
+ American people, "particularly the more silent part of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My hours in these libraries, together with a glimpse of the Widener room
+ at Harvard and certain booksellers' shelves, gave me some idea of what
+ American collectors have done towards making the New World a treasury of
+ the Old, and I realised how more and more necessary it will be, in the
+ future, for all critics of art in whatever branch, and of literature in
+ whatever branch, and all students even of antiquity, if they intend to be
+ thorough, to visit America. This I had guessed at, but never before had
+ known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English traveller lighting upon so many of the essentially English
+ riches as are conserved in American libraries, and particularly when he
+ has not a meagre share of national pride, cannot but pause to wonder how
+ it came about&mdash;and comes about&mdash;that so much that ought to be in
+ its own country has been permitted to stray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England collectors and connoisseurs are by no means rare. What, then,
+ were they doing to let all these letters of Keats and Shelley, Burns and
+ Byron, Lamb and Johnson&mdash;to name for the moment nothing else&mdash;find
+ their resting-place in America? The dollar is very powerful, I know, but
+ should it have been as pre-eminently powerful as this? Need it have
+ defeated so much patriotism?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pictures come into a different category, for every artist painted more
+ than one picture. I have experienced no shade of resentment towards their
+ new owners in looking at the superb collections of old and new foreign
+ masters in the American public and private galleries; for so long as there
+ are enough examples of the masters to go round, every nation should have a
+ share. With MSS., however, it is different. Facsimiles, such as the Boston
+ Bibliographical Society's edition of Lamb's letters, would serve for the
+ rest of the world, and the originals should be in their author's native
+ land. But that is a counsel of perfection. The only thing to do is to grin
+ and bear it, and feel happy that these unique possessions are preserved
+ with such loving pride and care. Any idea of retaliation on America on the
+ part of England by buying up the MSS. of the great American writers, such
+ as Franklin and Poe, Hawthorne and Emerson, Thoreau and Lowell, Holmes and
+ Whitman, was rendered futile by the discovery that Mr. Morgan possesses
+ these too. I had in his library all the Breakfast Table series in my
+ hands, together with a play by Poe not yet published.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MOUNT VERNON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mention of the beautiful solicitude with which these treasures are
+ surrounded, suggests the reflection that the old country has something to
+ learn from the new in the matter of distinguished custodianship. We have
+ no place of national pilgrimage in England that is so perfect a model as
+ Washington's home at Mount Vernon. It is perhaps through lack of a figure
+ of the Washington type that we have nothing to compare with it; for any
+ parallel one must rather go to Fontainebleau; but certain shrines are ours
+ and none of them discloses quite such pious thoroughness as this. When I
+ think of the completeness of the preservation and reconstruction of Mount
+ Vernon, where, largely through the piety of individuals, a thousand
+ personal relics have been reassembled, so that, save for the sightseers,
+ this serene and simple Virginian mansion is almost exactly as it was, I am
+ filled with admiration. For a young people largely in a hurry to find time
+ to be so proud and so reverent is a significant thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is this spirit of pious reverence confined to national memorials.
+ Longfellow's Wayside Inn in Massachusetts, although still only a hostelry,
+ compares not unfavourably with Dove Cottage at Grasmere and Carlyle's
+ house in Chelsea. The preservation is more minute. But to return to Mount
+ Vernon, the orderliness of the place is not its least noticeable feature.
+ There is no mingling of trade with sentiment, as at Stratford-on-Avon, for
+ example. Within the borders of the estate everything is quiet. I have
+ never seen Americans in church (not, I hasten to add, because they
+ abstain, but because I did), but I am sure that they could not, even
+ there, behave more as if the environment were sacred. To watch the crowds
+ at Mount Vernon, and to contemplate the massive isolated grandeur of the
+ Lincoln Memorial now being finished at Washington, is to realise that
+ America, for all its superficial frivolity and cynicism, is capable of a
+ very deep seriousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VERS LIBRE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It would have been pedantic, while in America, to have abstained from an
+ effort at <i>vers libre</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0054" id="link2H_4_0054"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ REVOLT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I had been to the Metropolitan Museum looking at beautiful things and
+ rejoicing in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then I had to catch a train and go far into the country, to Paul
+ Smith's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as the light lessened and the brooding hour set in I looked out of the
+ window and reconstructed some of the lovely things I had seen&mdash;the
+ sculptures and the paintings, the jewels and the porcelain: all the fine
+ flower of the arts through the ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed marvellous beyond understanding that such perfection could
+ exist, and I thought how wonderful it must be to be God and see His
+ creatures rising now and again to such heights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then I came to a station where there was to be a very long wait, and I
+ went to an inn for a meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a dirty neglected place, with a sullen unwashed man at the door,
+ who called raspingly to his wife within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when she came she was a slattern, with dishevelled hair and a soiled
+ dress and apron, and she looked miserable and worn out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She prepared a meal which I could not eat, and when I went to pay for it I
+ found her sitting dejectedly in a chair looking with a kind of dumb
+ despair at the day's washing-up still to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as I walked up and down the road waiting for the car I thought of this
+ woman's earlier life when she was happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I thought of her in her courtship, when her husband loved her and they
+ looked forward to marriage and he was tender and she was blithe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They probably went to Coney Island together and laughed with the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it seemed iniquitous that such changes should come about and that
+ merry girls should grow into sluts and slovens, and ardent young husbands
+ should degenerate into unkempt bullies, and houses meant for happiness
+ should decay, and marriage promises all be forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And I felt that if the world could not be better managed than that I never
+ wanted to see any of God's artistic darlings at the top of their form
+ again and the Metropolitan Museum could go hang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0055" id="link2H_4_0055"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I believe that few statements about America would so surprise English
+ people as that it has beautiful architecture. I was prepared to find
+ Boston and Cambridge old-fashioned and homelike&mdash;Oliver Wendell
+ Holmes had initiated me; I had a distinct notion of the cool spaciousness
+ of the White House and the imposing proportions of the Capitol and, of
+ course, I knew that one had but to see the skyscrapers of New York to
+ experience the traditional repulsion! But of the church of St. Thomas on
+ Fifth Avenue I had heard nothing, nor of Mr. Morgan's exquisite library,
+ nor of the Grand Central terminus, nor of the Lincoln Memorial at
+ Washington, nor of the bland charm of Mount Vernon. Nor had I expected to
+ find Fifth Avenue so dignified and cordial a thoroughfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even less was I prepared for such metal work and stone work as is to be
+ seen in some of the business houses&mdash;such as, for example, the new
+ Guaranty Trust offices, both on Broadway and in Fifth Avenue. Even the
+ elevators (for which we in England, in spite of our ancient lethargy, have
+ a one-syllable word) are often finished with charming taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Least of all did I anticipate the maturity of America's buildings. Those
+ serene façades on Beacon Street overlooking Boston Common, where the
+ Autocrat used to walk (and I made an endeavour to follow his identical
+ footsteps, for he was my first real author)&mdash;they are as satisfying
+ as anything in Georgian London. And I shall long treasure the memory of
+ the warm red brick and easy proportions of the Boston City Hall and
+ Faneuil Hall, and Independence Hall at Philadelphia seen through a screen
+ of leaves. But in England (and these buildings were English once) we still
+ have many old red brick buildings; what we have not is anything to
+ correspond with the spacious friendly houses of wood which I saw in the
+ country all about Boston and at Cambridge&mdash;such houses as that which
+ was Lowell's home&mdash;each amid its own greenery. Nowhere, however, did
+ I see a more comely manor house of the old Colonial style than Anthony
+ Wayne's, near Daylesford, in Pennsylvania. In England only cottages are
+ built of wood, and I rather think that there are now by-laws against that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not all the good country houses, big and little, are, however, old.
+ American architects in the past few years seem to have developed a very
+ attractive type of home, often only a cottage, and I saw a great number of
+ these on the slopes of the Hudson, all the new ones combining taste with
+ the suggestion of comfort. The conservation of trees wherever possible is
+ an admirable feature of modern suburban planning in America. In England
+ the new suburb too often has nothing but saplings. In America, again, the
+ houses, even the very small ones, are more often detached than with us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0056" id="link2H_4_0056"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BOSTON
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Once the lay-out of New York has been mastered&mdash;its avenues and
+ numbered cross streets&mdash;it is the most difficult city in the world in
+ which to lose one's way. But Boston is different. I found Boston hard to
+ learn, although it was a pleasant task to acquire knowledge, for I was led
+ into some of the quietest little Georgian streets I have ever been in,
+ steep though some of them were, and along one of the fairest of green
+ walks&mdash;that between the back of Beacon Street and the placid Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against Boston I have a certain grudge, for I could find no one to direct
+ me to the place where the tea was thrown overboard. But that it was
+ subjected to this indignity we may be certain&mdash;partly from the
+ testimony of subsequent events not too soothing to English feelings, and
+ partly from the unpopularity which that honest herb still suffers on
+ American soil. Coffee, yes; coffee at all times; but no one will take any
+ but the most perfunctory interest in the preparation of tea. I found the
+ harbour; I traversed wharf after wharf; but found no visible record of the
+ most momentous act of jettison since Jonah. In the top room, however, of
+ Faneuil Hall, in the Honourable Artillery Company's headquarters, the more
+ salient incidents of the struggle which followed are all depicted by
+ enthusiastic, if not too talented, painters; and I saw in the distance the
+ monument on Bunker's Hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My cicerone must be excused, for he was a Boston man, born and bred, and I
+ ought never to have put him to the humiliation of confessing his natural
+ ignorance. But the record is there, and legible enough. The tablet (many
+ kind correspondents have informed me since certain of these notes appeared
+ in the <i>Outlook</i>) is at 495 Atlantic Avenue, in the water-front
+ district, just a short walk from the South Station, and it has the
+ following inscription:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ HERE FORMERLY STOOD
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ GRIFFIN'S WHARF
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ at which lay moored on Dec. 16, 1773, three British ships with cargoes of
+ tea. To defeat King George's trivial but tyrannical tax of three pence a
+ pound, about ninety citizens of Boston, partly disguised as Indians,
+ boarded the ships, threw the cargoes, three hundred and forty-two chests
+ in all, into the sea and made the world ring with the patriotic exploit of
+ the
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ BOSTON TEA PARTY
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "No! ne'er was mingled such a draught
+ In palace, hall, or arbor,
+ As freemen brewed and tyrants quaffed
+ That night in Boston Harbor."
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Boston has a remarkable art gallery and museum, notable for its ancient
+ Chinese paintings, its collection of Japanese prints&mdash;one of the best
+ in the world, I believe&mdash;and a dazzling wall of water-colours by Mr.
+ Sargent. It was here that I saw my first Winslow Homers&mdash;two or three
+ rapid sketches of fishermen in full excitement&mdash;and was conquered by
+ his verve and actuality. In the Metropolitan Museum in New York I found
+ him again in oils and my admiration increased. Surely no one ever can have
+ painted the sea with more vividness, power and truth! We have no example
+ of his work in any public gallery in London; nor have we anything by W. M.
+ Chase, Arthur B. Davies, Swain Gifford, J. W. Alexander, George Inness, or
+ De Forest Brush. It is more than time for another American Exhibition. As
+ it is, the only modern American artists of whom there is any general
+ knowledge in England are Mr. Sargent, Mr. Epstein and Mr. Pennell, and the
+ late E. A. Abbey, G. H. Boughton, and Whistler. Other Americans painting
+ in our midst are Mr. Mark Fisher, R.A., Mr. J. J. Shannon, R.A., Mr. J.
+ McLure Hamilton, and Mr. G. Wetherbee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Boston Gallery is the proud possessor of the rough and unfinished but
+ "speaking" likeness of George Washington by his predestined limner Gilbert
+ Stuart, and also a companion presentment of Washington's wife. Looking
+ upon this lady's countenance and watching a party of school girls who were
+ making the tour of the rooms, not uncomforted on their arduous adventure
+ by chocolate and other confections, it occurred to me that if America
+ increases her present love of eating sweets, due, I am told, not a little
+ to Prohibition, George Washington will gradually disappear into the
+ background and Martha Washington, who has already given her name to a very
+ popular brand of candy, will be venerated instead, as the Sweet Mother of
+ her Country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An American correspondent sends me the following poem in order to explain
+ to me the deviousness of Boston's principal thoroughfare. The poet is Mr.
+ Sam Walter Foss:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ One day through the primeval wood
+ A calf walked home, as good calves should;
+
+ But made a trail all bent askew,
+ A crooked trail, as all calves do.
+
+ Since then two hundred years have fled,
+ And, I infer, the calf is dead.
+
+ But still he left behind his trail,
+ And thereby hangs my moral tale.
+
+ The trail was taken up next day
+ By a lone dog that passed that way;
+
+ And then a wise bell-wether sheep
+ Pursued the trail o'er vale and steep,
+
+ And drew the flock behind him too,
+ As good bell-wethers always do.
+
+ And from that day o'er hill and glade
+ Through those old woods a path was made,
+
+ And many men wound in and out,
+ And dodged and turned and bent about,
+
+ And uttered words of righteous wrath
+ Because 'twas such a crooked path;
+
+ But still they followed&mdash;do not laugh&mdash;
+ The first migrations of that calf,
+
+ And through this winding wood-way stalked
+ Because he wabbled when he walked.
+
+ The forest path became a lane
+ That bent and turned and turned again;
+
+ This crooked lane became a road,
+ Where many a poor horse with his load
+
+ Toiled on beneath the burning sun,
+ And travelled some three miles in one.
+
+ And thus a century and a half
+ They trod the footsteps of that calf.
+
+ The years passed on in swiftness fleet,
+ The road became a village street,
+
+ And then before men were aware,
+ A city's crowded thoroughfare,
+
+ And soon the central street was this
+ Of a renowned metropolis.
+
+ And men two centuries and a half
+ Trod in the footsteps of that calf.
+
+ Each day a hundred thousand rout
+ Followed the zigzag calf about;
+
+ And o'er his crooked journey went
+ The traffic of a continent.
+
+ A hundred thousand men were led
+ By one calf near three centuries dead.
+
+ They followed still his crooked way
+ And lost one hundred years a day;
+
+ For thus such reverence is lent
+ To well-established precedent.
+
+ A moral lesson this might teach,
+ Were I ordained and called to preach.
+
+ For men are prone to go it blind
+ Along the calf-paths of the mind,
+
+ And work away from sun to sun
+ To do what other men have done.
+
+ They follow in the beaten track,
+ And out and in and forth and back
+
+ And still their devious course pursue,
+ To keep the paths that others do.
+
+ But how the wise old wood-gods laugh
+ Who saw the first primeval calf!
+
+ Ah, many things this tale might teach&mdash;But
+ I am not ordained to preach.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0057" id="link2H_4_0057"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PHILADELPHIA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I was fortunate in the city over which William Penn, in giant effigy,
+ keeps watch and ward, in having as guide, philosopher and friend Mr. A.
+ Edward Newton, the Johnsonian, and the author of one of the best examples
+ of "amateur" literature that I know&mdash;"The Amenities of
+ Book-Collecting." Mr. Newton took me everywhere, even to the little
+ seventeenth-century Swedish church, which architecturally may be described
+ as the antipodes of Philadelphia's newer glory, the Curtis Building, where
+ editors are lodged like kings and can be attained to (if at all) only
+ through marble halls. We went to St. Peter's, where, suddenly awaking
+ during the sermon, one would think oneself to be in a London city church,
+ and to the Historical Museum, where I found among the Quaker records many
+ of my own ancestors and was bewildered amid such a profusion of relics of
+ Penn, Washington and Franklin. In the old library were more traces of
+ Franklin, including his famous electrical appliance, again testifying to
+ the white flame with which American hero-worship can burn; and we found
+ the sagacious Benjamin once more at the Franklin Inn Club, where the
+ simplicity of the eighteenth century mingles with the humour and culture
+ of the twentieth. We then drove through several miles of Fairmount Park,
+ stopping for a few minutes in the hope of finding the late J. G. Johnson's
+ Vermeer in the gallery there; but for the moment it was in hiding, the
+ walls being devoted to his Italian pictures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally we drew up at the gates of that strange and imposing Corinthian
+ temple which might have been dislodged from its original site and hurled
+ to Philadelphia by the first Quaker, Poseidon&mdash;the Girard College.
+ This solemn fane we were permitted to enter only on convincing the porter
+ that we were not ministers of religion&mdash;an easy enough task for Mr.
+ Newton, who wears with grace the natural abandon of a Voltairean, but a
+ difficult one for me. Why Stephen Girard, the worthy "merchant and
+ mariner" who endowed this institution, was so suspicious of the cloth, no
+ matter what its cut, I do not know; no doubt he had his reasons; but his
+ prejudices are faithfully respected by his janitor, whose eye is a very
+ gimlet of suspicion. However, we got in and saw the philanthropist's tomb
+ and his household effects behind those massive columns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening I spent in Mr. Newton's library among Blake and Lamb and
+ Johnson autographs and MSS., breaking the Tenth Commandment with a
+ recklessness that would have satisfied and delighted Stephen Girard's
+ gatekeeper; and the next day we were off to Valley Forge to see with what
+ imaginative thoughtfulness the Government has been transforming
+ Washington's camp into a national park and restoring the old landmarks. It
+ was a fine spring day and the woods were flecked with the white and pink
+ blossoms of the dogwood&mdash;a tree which in England is only an
+ inconspicuous hedgerow bush but here has both charm and importance and
+ some of the unexpectedness of a tropical growth. I wish we could
+ acclimatise it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The memorial chapel now in course of completion on one of the Valley Forge
+ eminences seemed to me a very admirable example not only of modern Gothic
+ but of votive piety. And such a wealth of American symbolism cannot exist
+ elsewhere. But in the severe little cottage where Washington made his
+ headquarters, down by the stream, with all his frugal campaigning
+ furniture and accessories in their old places, I felt more emotion than in
+ the odour of sanctity. The simple reality of it conquered the stained
+ glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0058" id="link2H_4_0058"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ GENERAL REFLECTIONS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Looking back on it all I realise that America never struck me as a new
+ country, although its inhabitants often seemed to be a new people. The
+ cities are more mature than the citizens. New York, Chicago, Boston,
+ Philadelphia, Washington&mdash;all have an air of permanence and age. The
+ buildings, even the most fantastic, suggest indigenousness, or at least
+ stability; nor would the presence of more ancient structures increase this
+ effect. To the eye of the ordinary Englishman accustomed to work in what
+ we call the City, in Fleet Street, in the Strand, in Piccadilly, or in
+ Oxford Street, New York would not appear to be a younger place than
+ London, and Boston might easily strike him as older. Nor is London more
+ than a little older, except in spots, such as the Tower and the Temple and
+ the Abbey, and that little Tudor row in Holborn, all separated by vast
+ tracts of modernity. Indeed, I would almost go farther and say that London
+ sets up an illusion of being newer even than New York by reason of its
+ more disturbing street traffic both in the roads and on the footways, and
+ the prevalence of the gaily coloured omnibuses which thunder along so many
+ thoroughfares in notable contrast with the sedate and sober vehicles that
+ serve Fifth Avenue and are hardly seen elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile an illusion of antiquity is set up by New York's habit of
+ commingling business houses and private residences, which surely belongs
+ to an older order of society. In London we have done away with such a
+ blend. Our nearest approach to Fifth Avenue is, I suppose, Regent Street;
+ but there are no mansions among the shops of Regent Street. Our shops are
+ there and our mansions are elsewhere, far away, in what we call
+ residential quarters&mdash;such as Park Lane, Queen's Gate, Mayfair, the
+ Bayswater Road, and Grosvenor Square. To turn out of Fifth Avenue into the
+ quiet streets where people live is to receive a distinct impression of
+ sedateness such as New York is never supposed to convey. One has the same
+ feeling in the other great American cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when it comes to their inhabitants there are to the English eye fewer
+ signs of maturity. I have never been able to get rid of the idea that
+ every one I have met in America, no matter how grave a senior, instead of
+ being really and self-consciously in the thick of life, is only getting
+ ready to begin. Perhaps this is due in part to the pleasure&mdash;the
+ excitement almost&mdash;which American business men&mdash;and all
+ Americans are business men&mdash;take in their work. They not merely do
+ it, but they enjoy doing it and they watch themselves doing it. They seem
+ to have a knack of withdrawing aside and observing themselves as from the
+ stalls, not without applause. In other words, they dramatise continually.
+ Now, one does not do this when one is old&mdash;it is a childish game&mdash;and
+ it is another proof that they are younger than we, who do not enjoy our
+ work, and indeed, most of us, are ashamed of it and want the world to
+ believe that we live like the lilies on private means.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Similarly, many Americans seem, when they talk, to be two persons: one the
+ talker, and the other the listener charmed by the quality of his
+ discourse. There is nothing detrimental in such duplicity. Indeed, I think
+ I have a very real envy of it. But one of the defects of the listening
+ habit is perhaps to make them too rhetorical, too verbose. It is odd that
+ the nation that has given us so much epigrammatic slang and the telegraph
+ and the telephone and the typewriter should have so little of what might
+ be called intellectual short-hand. But so it is. Too many Americans are
+ remorseless when they are making themselves clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the passion for printed idiomatic sententiousness and arresting
+ trade-notices is visible all the time. You see it in the newspapers and in
+ the shops. I found a children's millinery shop in New York with this
+ laconic indication of its scope, in permanent letters, on the plate-glass
+ window: "Lids for Kids." A New York undertaker, I am told, has affixed to
+ all his hearses the too legible legend: "You may linger, but I'll get you
+ yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it comes to descriptive new words, coined rapidly to meet occasions,
+ we English are nowhere compared with the Americans. Could there be
+ anything better than the term "Nearbeer" to reveal at a blow the character
+ of a substitute for ale? I take off my hat, too, to "crape-hanger," which
+ leaves "kill-joy" far in the rear. But "optience" for a cinema audience,
+ which sees but does not hear, though ingenious, is less admirable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although I found the walls of business offices in New York and elsewhere
+ decorated with pithy counsel to callers, and discouragements to
+ irrelevance, such as "Come to the point but don't camp on it," "To hell
+ with yesterday," and so forth, I am very doubtful if with all these
+ suggestions of practical address and Napoleonic efficiency the American
+ business man is as quick and decisive as ours can be. There is more
+ autobiography talked in American offices than in English; more getting
+ ready to begin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have, however, no envy of the American man's inability to loaf and
+ invite his soul, as his great democratic poet was able to do. I think that
+ this unfamiliarity with armchair life is a misfortune. That article of
+ furniture, we must suppose, is for older civilisations, where men have
+ either, after earning the right to recline, taken their ease gracefully,
+ or have inherited their fortune and are partial to idleness. It consorts
+ ill with those who are still either continually and restlessly in pursuit
+ of the dollar or are engaged in the occupation of watching dollars
+ automatically arrive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the things, I take it, for Americans to learn is how to transform
+ money into a friend. So many men who ought to be quietly rejoicing in
+ their riches seem still to be anxious and acquisitive; so many men who
+ have become suddenly wealthy seem to be allowing their gains to ruin their
+ happiness. For the nation's good nearly every one, I fancy, has too much
+ money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My experience is that England has almost everything to learn from America
+ in the matter of hotels. I consider American second and third-class hotels
+ to be better in many ways than our best. Every American restaurant, of
+ each grade, is better than the English equivalent; the appointments are
+ better, the food is served with more distinction and often is better too.
+ When it comes to coffee, there is no comparison whatever: American coffee
+ is the best in the world. Only quite recently has the importance of the
+ complete suite entered the intelligence of the promoters of English
+ hotels, and in myriads of these establishments, called first class, there
+ is still but one bathroom to twenty rooms. Heating coils and hot and cold
+ water in the rooms are even more rare: so rare as to be mentioned in the
+ advertisements. Telephones in the rooms are rarer. In too many hotels in
+ England there is still no light at the head of the bed. But we have
+ certain advantages. For example, in English restaurants there is always
+ something on the table to eat at once&mdash;<i>hors d'oeuvres</i> or bread
+ and butter. In America there is too often nothing ready but iced water&mdash;an
+ ungenial overture to any feast&mdash;and you must wait until your order
+ has been taken. Other travellers, even Americans, have agreed with me that
+ it would be more comfortable if the convention which decrees that the
+ waiter shall bring everything together could be overruled. Something "to
+ go on with" is a great ameliorative, especially when one is hungry and
+ tired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In thus commending American hotels over English it is, however, only right
+ to admit that the American hotels are very much more expensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While on the subject of eating, I would say that for all their notorious
+ freedoms Americans have a better sense of order than we. Their policemen
+ may carry their batons drawn, and even swing them with a certain insolent
+ defiance or even provocation, but New York goes on its way with more
+ precision and less disturbance than London, and every one is smarter, more
+ alert. The suggestion of a living wage for all is constant. It is indeed
+ on this sense of orderliness that the success of certain of the American
+ time-saving appliances is built. The Automat restaurants, for example,
+ where the customer gets all his requirements himself, would never do in
+ London. The idea is perfect; but it requires the co-operation of the
+ customer, and that is what we should fail to provide. The spotless
+ cleanliness and mechanical exactitude of these places in New York would
+ cease in London, and gradually they would decline and then disappear. At
+ heart, we in England dislike well-managed places. Nor can I see New York's
+ public distribution of hot water adopted in London. Such little geysers as
+ expel steam at intervals through the roadway of Fifth Avenue will never, I
+ fear, be found in Regent Street or Piccadilly. Our communism is very
+ patchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are some unexpected differences between America and England. It is
+ odd, for instance, to find a nation from whom we get most of our tobacco
+ and who have the reputation of even chewing cigars, with such strict rules
+ against smoking. In the Music Halls, which are, as a rule, better than
+ ours, smoking is permitted only in certain parts. Public decorum again is,
+ I should say, more noticeable in an American than an English city, and yet
+ both in San Francisco and New York I dined in restaurants&mdash;not late&mdash;between
+ 7 and 8&mdash;and not furtive hole-in-corner places,&mdash;where girls
+ belonging to the establishment, wearing almost nothing at all, performed
+ the latest dances, with extravagant and daring variations of them, among
+ the tables. In London this kind of thing is unknown. In Paris it occurs
+ only in the night cafés. It struck me as astonishing&mdash;and probably
+ not at all to the good&mdash;that it should be an ordinary dinner
+ accompaniment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was asked while I was in America to set down some of the chief things
+ that I missed. I might easily have begun with walking-sticks, for until I
+ reached New York I seemed to be the only man in America who carried one,
+ although a San Francisco friend confessed to sometimes "wearing a cane" on
+ Sundays. I missed a Visitors' Book either at the British Embassy in
+ Washington or at the White House. After passing through India, where one's
+ first duty is to enter one's name in these volumes, it seemed odd that the
+ same machinery of civility should be lacking. I missed any system of
+ cleaning boots during the night, in the hotels; but I soon became
+ accustomed to this, and rather enjoyed visiting the "shine parlours," in
+ one of which was this crisp notice: "If you like our work, tell your
+ friends; if you don't like it, tell us." I missed gum-chewing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was on returning to England that I began really to take notice.
+ Then I found myself missing America's cleanliness, America's despatch, its
+ hotel efficiency, its lashings of cream, its ice on every hand. All this
+ at Liverpool! I missed later the petrol fountains all about the roads, a
+ few of which I had seen in India, at which the motorist can replenish; but
+ these surely will not be long in coming. I don't want England to be
+ Americanised; I don't want America to cease to be a foreign country; but
+ there are lessons each of us can learn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I were an American, although I travelled abroad now and then (and I
+ hold that it is the duty of a man to see other lands but live in his own)
+ I should concentrate on America. It is the country of the future. I am
+ glad I have seen it and now know something&mdash;however slight&mdash;about
+ it at first hand. I made many friends there and amassed innumerable
+ delightful memories. But what is the use of eight weeks? I am ashamed not
+ to have gone there sooner, and humiliated by the brevity of my stay. I
+ have had the opportunity only to lift a thousand curtains, get a glimpse
+ of the entertainment on the other side and drop them again. I should like
+ to go there every other year and have time: time to make the acquaintance
+ of a naturalist and learn from him the names of birds and trees and
+ flowers; time to loiter in the byways; time to penetrate into deeper
+ strata where intimacies strike root and the real discoveries are made;
+ time to discern beneath the surface, so hard and assured, something fey,
+ something wistful, the sense of tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INDEX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Adirondacks, etc.
+ Agra and its Fort
+ Aitken, E. H., his three books
+ Akbar
+ America, its democracy
+ its humour
+ its slang
+ its trains
+ its women
+ its newspapers
+ its MSS.
+ its hotels
+ its maturity
+ American painters in England
+ Americans, at home and abroad
+ Americans, their clothes
+ their physiognomy
+ their disturbing wealth
+ Aquariums
+ Architecture in America
+ "Association" books
+
+ Baker, Mr. Herbert
+ Bam Bahadur, that great hunter
+ Baseball and cricket
+ Beecher, Henry Ward
+ Benares
+ Berkeley University
+ Bernier on the Moguls
+ Betel-nut chewing
+ Birds in India
+ Blackbuck, the agile
+ Bombay&mdash;Towers of Silence
+ Boston
+ Butler, H.E., Sir Harcourt
+
+ Calcutta&mdash;the piano-carriers
+ its snake charmers
+ and the Maidan
+ and its English buildings
+ its old cemetery
+ Charnock, Job
+ Chicago, its hospitable policeman
+ its pictures
+ Cinema, the
+ Cobb, Mr. Irvin
+ Comparisons between America and England
+ Coney Island
+ Cow-worship in India
+ Cricket and baseball
+ Curzon, Lord, his preservation of ancient buildings
+
+ Dances in India and Japan
+ Delhi&mdash;the camel omnibuses
+ its architecture
+ and the Mutiny
+ Fort
+ Dickens, Charles, presentation copies
+
+ "Eha," his three books
+ Elephanta, caves of
+
+ Fakirs in India
+ Fatehpur-Sikri
+ Faneuil Hall, Boston
+ Fifth Avenue
+ Foss, Mr. Samuel W., his Boston poem
+ Franklin, Benjamin
+ Fujiyama
+ Funerals in India and England
+
+ Ganges, the
+ Geisha dances
+ Gilbert, Mr. Cass
+ Girard, Stephen
+ Goschen, Lord, wounds the tiger
+
+ Hakone, Lake
+ Hawking
+ Herford, Mr. Oliver
+ Hindus, the, and animals
+ Hokusai
+ Holmes, Oliver Wendell
+ Hong-Kong, funeral at
+ Honolulu
+ Hooghli, the
+ Hotels in America
+ Humayun's Tomb
+ Huntington, Mr. H. E.
+
+ Jahan, Shah, his buildings
+ Jains, the, their preservation of life
+ Japan&mdash;its lack of idlers
+ and animal life
+ its women
+ its American reading
+ Japanese, their small stature
+ materialism
+ public manners
+ their gold teeth
+ Journalism in America
+
+ Katsuragava rapids
+ Keats' <i>Lamia</i>, 1820
+ Kesteven, Sir Charles, his library
+ Khan, Sir Umar Hayat
+ Kohinoor, the
+ Kutb Minar, the
+ Kyoto, its temples
+
+ Lake Placid Club
+ Lamb, Mr. A. M., his distress at Honolulu
+ Charles, first editions
+ manuscripts
+ Landor, Walter Savage
+ Lavater abroad
+ Lincoln Memorial
+ Liston, Lt.-Col. Glen
+ Lucknow and the Mutiny
+ its delectability
+ Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer, R.A., goes hawking
+ and Imperial Delhi
+ and the priests
+ and the divers
+ hunts the tiger
+ Marquis, Mr. Don
+ Moguls, the
+ Mohammedan customs
+ priests
+ Monkeys
+ Morgan, Mr. J. Pierpont
+ Mount Vernon
+ Mutiny, the
+ Myanoshita
+
+ Nautch, the
+ Nawanagar, the Jam of
+ New or Imperial Delhi
+ New York, its skyscrapers
+ its buildings
+ its aquarium
+ its shops
+ its dances
+ its sky signs
+ its pictures
+ its MSS.
+ its maturity
+ Newspapers in America
+ Newton, Mr. A. Edward
+
+ Otome Pass
+
+ Painters, American, in England
+ Parsees, the
+ Peacock Throne, the
+ Philadelphia
+ Pictures in America
+ Prince of Wales in New York
+ Prohibition
+ Pronunciation in America
+
+ Ranjitsinhji, Prince
+ Rickshaws
+ Roosevelt, Theodore, his Memorial Road
+ "Rose Aylmer"
+ Ruth, "Babe"
+
+ San Francisco
+ Saranac
+ <i>Saturday Evening Post</i>, the
+ Scott, Mr. A. P., his house
+ Sculpture in America
+ Shaw, Mr. Bernard
+ Simplified spelling
+ Skyscrapers
+ Skysigns
+ Slang in America
+ Snake-poison antidotes
+ St. Gaudens, Augustus
+ Stevenson, Robert Louis
+ Swamp-deer hunting
+ Swan, Mr. Thomas, his despair at Honolulu
+
+ Taj Mahal, the
+ Talmadge, Constance
+ Norma
+ Tavernier on the Moguls
+ Theatre, the, in Japan
+ Tiger hunt, a
+ Tinney, Frank
+ Tokio, its dress
+ its theatre
+ Tolstoi, Count Leo
+ Towers of Silence
+ Townsend, Joe, his ballad
+
+ Valley Forge
+ Venice and Benares
+ Vers Libre
+ Vultures
+
+ Washington
+ George
+ Martha
+ Wayne, Anthony
+ Wayside Inn, the
+ Wheeler, Mr. Charles Stetson, his story
+ Women in America
+ in Japan
+ Woolworth Building, the
+
+ Yamaguchi, Madame
+ Yokohama
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Roving East and Roving West, by E. V. Lucas
+
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+
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
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